Greatland
Gold plc (AIM: GGP)
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info@greatlandgold.com
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https://greatlandgold.com
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NEWS RELEASE
| 18 November
2024
Final Results and Publication of Annual Report
THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS
INSIDE INFORMATION AS STIPULATED UNDER THE UK MARKET ABUSE
REGULATIONS. ON PUBLICATION OF THIS ANNOUNCEMENT VIA A
REGULATORY INFORMATION SERVICE, THIS INFORMATION IS CONSIDERED TO
BE IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN.
Greatland Gold plc (AIM:GGP) (Greatland or the Company) is pleased to announce its
audited financial results for the year ended 30 June 2024.
Highlights
Transformational acquisition of 100% of Havieron and
Telfer (post year end)
§ On 10 September 2024,
Greatland announced the acquisition of 100% ownership of the
Havieron gold-copper project, the Telfer gold-copper mine, and
other related assets and interests in the Paterson region from
Newmont Corporation (NYSE:NEM) (Acquisition)
§ Total consideration and
loan repayment of up to US$475 million including US$155.1 million
cash, US$52.4 million joint venture loan repayment, US$167.5
million Greatland shares and US$100 million deferred contingent
payments
§ Greatland successfully
raised US$334 million (c. £255.3 million) in equity funding through
an institutional placing and retail offer, to fund the Acquisition
and other uses
§ Debt financing support
with Tier 1 banks ANZ, ING and HSBC:
§ Commitment letter for
A$75 million working capital facility and A$25 million contingent
instrument facility
§ Letter of support for
A$750 million project finance facilities to complete the
development of Havieron
§ Significant and highly
skilled Telfer workforce will join Greatland, preserving the
existing capability, expertise and knowledge to enable continuity
of efficient operations following Acquisition completion
§ Acquisition targeted to
complete by early December 2024
§ Greatland will emerge
from the acquisition as a significant Australian gold and copper
producer at Telfer, owner of Australia's second largest gold-copper
development project at Havieron, and owner of the only operating
processing plant in the Paterson region with a significant regional
exploration portfolio
Havieron
§ Welcomed the world's
largest gold miner, Newmont Corporation (NYSE:NEM) as Havieron
joint venture partner in November 2023
§ Completed an updated
Mineral Resource Estimate (MRE) for Havieron in December 2023,
outlining an increase in the total gold equivalent (AuEq) content
to 8.4Moz, a 29% increase from Greatland's March 2022 MRE
§ Havieron access decline
development progressed to over 3,060 meters, including more than
2,110 meters in the main access decline
§ Feasibility study to be
completed by Greatland within 12 months from Acquisition
completion
Greatland Managing Director, Shaun Day,
commented: "It has been a truly
transformative period for Greatland and our flagship Havieron
gold-copper project. Thanks to a huge amount of work by our
Greatland team and a highly collaborative approach by our Havieron
joint venture partner Newmont throughout the year, we have been
able to seize a compelling and strategic opportunity to consolidate
100% ownership of Havieron and Telfer.
"The acquisition, announced on 10 September 2024 and targeted
to complete by early December, will make Greatland a significant
Australian gold and copper producer with one of the country's best
development projects."
"The acquisition of Telfer provides a de-risked near term
mine plan with substantial ore stockpiles at surface, and
attractive mine life extension opportunities. Telfer's production
is expected to generate free cash flow, supporting the development
of Havieron."
"Ownership of the Telfer infrastructure substantially
de-risks and reduces the cost of completing Havieron's development,
and enhances the potential value of exploration success in our
extensive Paterson exploration portfolio. We are well
positioned to build a generational mining complex and create value
for our shareholders."
Publication of Annual Report
The 2024 Annual Report is
available for download on our website at
https://greatlandgold.com/investors/results/ and will be mailed to
registered shareholders.
Contact
For further information, please
contact:
Greatland Gold plc
Shaun Day, Managing Director
| Rowan Krasnoff, Head of Business Development
info@greatlandgold.com
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About Greatland
Greatland is a mining development and exploration
company focused primarily on precious and base metals.
Havieron is located approximately 45km east of the
Telfer gold mine. The box cut and decline to the Havieron orebody
commenced in February 2021. Total development exceeds 3,060m
including over 2,110m of advance in the main access decline (as at
30 June 2024). Havieron is intended to leverage the existing
Telfer infrastructure and processing plant, which would de-risk the
development and reduces capital expenditure.
On 10 September 2024, Greatland announced that
certain of its wholly owned subsidiaries had entered into a binding
agreement with certain Newmont Corporation subsidiaries to acquire,
subject to certain conditions being satisfied, a 70% ownership
interest in the Havieron gold-copper project (consolidating
Greatland's ownership of Havieron to 100%), 100% ownership of the
Telfer gold-copper mine, and other related interests in assets in
the Paterson region. Completion of the acquisition is subject
to the satisfaction of certain conditions precedent and is targeted
to occur during Q4 2024.
Greatland has a proven track record of discovery and
exploration success and is pursuing the next generation of tier-one
mineral deposits by applying advanced exploration techniques in
under-explored regions. Greatland has a number of exploration
projects across Western Australia and in parallel to the
development of Havieron is focused on becoming a multi-commodity
miner of significant scale
CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT
I am pleased to present this
Chairman's Statement for Greatland and its consolidated group
(Greatland or the
Group) for the year ended
30 June 2024. Together with my fellow Directors, I would like
to acknowledge what has been a pivotal and tremendous period for
Greatland. This progress continues to position Greatland as
one of the mining industry's most exciting growth
stories.
Greatland aspires to become a
profitable multi-mine resources company by focusing on the
responsible and sustainable discovery, development, extraction,
processing and sale of precious and base metals. Our strategy
to achieve this growth is built on three horizons:
· continued advancement of the world class Havieron gold-copper
project through to production;
· exploration to identify new precious and base metals deposits
with a particular focus on the highly prospective Paterson Province
of Western Australia; and
· disciplined assessment and, where compelling, pursuit of new
investment and acquisition opportunities in the resources
sector.
The past year has been an
exceptionally important period for Greatland and our flagship
asset, the world-class Havieron gold-copper project in the Paterson
region of Western Australia. In November 2023, we welcomed
Newmont Corporation (NYSE:NEM; Newmont) as our joint venture partner
in Havieron, following the completion of Newmont's acquisition of
Newcrest Mining Limited (previously ASX:NCM). In February
2024, Newmont announced a portfolio rationalisation involving their
intended divestment of six mines (including the Telfer gold-copper
mine located 45km to the west of Havieron) and two projects,
including its 70% joint venture interest in
Havieron.
Greatland discovered the Havieron
deposit and is committed to delivering Havieron's full potential
for its shareholders and other stakeholders. Greatland
considers that it has unrivalled knowledge and experience of
Havieron and an organisational expertise that is exceptionally well
placed to develop and operate Havieron.
Accordingly, consistent with our
strategy, after the end of the financial year on 10 September
2024, Greatland announced that it had entered into a binding
agreement with Newmont to acquire the 70% ownership interest in the
Havieron project (consolidating Greatland's ownership of Havieron
to 100%), 100% ownership of the Telfer gold-copper mine, and other
related interests in assets in the Paterson region (the
Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition). Completion of the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition
is subject to the satisfaction of certain conditions precedent and
is targeted to occur during Q4 2024.
The Havieron-Telfer Acquisition is
a transformative, highly accretive, and strategically compelling
transaction that has the potential to deliver material value for
Greatland's shareholders. Although the signing and
announcement of the transaction occurred after the end of the
financial year, it was the result of an exceptional amount of
planning and work that occurred during the year, and is a watershed
moment for Greatland, so I feel it is appropriate for it to be the
focus of this Chairman's Statement.
Greatland has agreed to acquire
Havieron, Telfer and other related interests in the Paterson region
for total consideration and debt repayment of up to US$475 million
(c.£373.1 million) before adjustments, comprising a combination of
upfront cash, new Greatland shares to be issued to Newmont
(representing c.20.4% of the enlarged Greatland share capital), and
deferred cash consideration.
We expect that combining the
Havieron and Telfer projects under Greatland's single ownership
will make us a material producer of gold and copper. Havieron
is a world class orebody with a defined pathway to become a
low-cost long life gold-copper asset of significant scale.
The acquisition of Telfer provides a defined mine plan that is
materially de-risked with substantial ore stockpiles and
significant mine life extension prospects. Telfer production
is expected to generate free cash flow which will help to fund the
Havieron development. Importantly, we look forward to
integrating an experienced and knowledgeable existing workforce
into the Greatland team
The acquisition will allow
Greatland to finalise and complete the Havieron feasibility study,
to determine the optimal mining throughput rate and development
plan to deliver maximum value from the project by leveraging the
existing Telfer infrastructure. In connection with the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition, on 10 September 2024 Greatland
executed a non-legally binding bank debt letter of support for
A$750 million (c.£385.7 million)
in proposed banking facilities for the
development of Havieron, with tier-1 lenders the
Australian and New Zealand Banking Group Limited,
HSBC Bank and ING Bank (Australia) (together, the Banking Syndicate). Combined with working capital from the successful equity
raising undertaken in connection with the transaction, and expected
cash flow generation from Telfer, we expect there is a clear and
non-dilutive pathway to the Havieron development being fully
funded.
To fund the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition, Greatland successfully raised, before expenses,
approximately US$325.0 million (c.£248.6 million) through an
underwritten oversubscribed institutional placing, and a further
approximately US$8.8 million (c.£6.7 million) through an
oversubscribed retail offering. This is the largest capital
raising on any London market by a mining company since 2017, a
testament to the strength of the Greatland platform, the terms of
the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition, and the quality of the assets to
be acquired. On 30 September 2024 Greatland shareholders
resoundingly approved the transaction, with 99.75% of shareholders
who voted voting in favour, and on 1 October 2024, we welcomed
many new investors as shareholders of Greatland.
The consolidation of 100%
ownership of Havieron and acquisition of Telfer is the opportunity
which Greatland has been working towards for some time, so we are
delighted to have executed the transaction. Our operating
strategy following completion of the acquisition is to renew and
develop an integrated Telfer-Havieron mining and processing
operation, to create a generational gold-copper mining
complex. Our team is now busy with integration planning, and
we look forward to completing the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition and
taking ownership of the assets, targeted in Q4 2024.
I extend my gratitude to the
Newmont team, for the collaborative approach they have taken
throughout our bilateral engagement on the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition, and that they continue to take as we work towards
completion. We look forward to welcoming Newmont as our major
shareholder upon completion of the transaction, and to continuing
our strong working relationship to make Greatland's ownership of
Havieron and Telfer a success for all stakeholders.
I would like to thank my fellow
Directors and the entire Greatland team for their support,
dedication and hard work during 2024. Led by our Managing
Director, Shaun Day, the effort and achievement of our management
team in reaching agreement of the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition
cannot be overstated. We celebrate the milestone and
turn our focus to the next chapter and work ahead of us, as
Greatland transforms to a material producer of gold and
copper. From a corporate perspective a focus for us in the
year ahead will be listing on the ASX, which we are targeting
within approximately six months from completing the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition, with preparations underway.
Finally, I thank our shareholders
for their continued support. We believe we have a compelling
opportunity to create value for our shareholders and are laser
focused on striving to do so.
Mark Barnaba
Chairman
18 November 2024
STRATEGIC REPORT
The Managing Director presents the
strategic report on Greatland
for the year ended 30 June 2024.
Principal activities, strategies and business
model
The principal activity of the
Group during the year was to explore for and develop precious and
base metal assets.
The Group aspires to become a
profitable multi-mine resources company by focusing on the
responsible and sustainable discovery, development, extraction,
processing and sale of precious and base metals.
Greatland has a clear strategy to
achieve this growth which is built on three horizons:
·
Continued advancement of the world class Havieron
gold-copper project through to production;
·
Exploration to identify new precious and base
metals deposits with a particular focus on the highly prospective
Paterson region of Western Australia; and
·
Disciplined assessment and, where compelling,
pursuit of investment and acquisition opportunities in the
resources sector.
Greatland's strategy and business
model is developed by the Managing Director and approved by the
Board. The Managing Director reports to the Board and is
responsible for implementing the Group's strategy and operating its
business, with the executive team.
Safety
Greatland's most important
priority is safety. Greatland achieved its goal of
maintaining a safe workplace with no fatalities at the Company's
projects and nil Total Recordable Injury Frequency Rate for the
Company (fully owned or operated projects) during the
year.
Corporate
After the conclusion of the
financial year, on 10 September 2024 Greatland announced that
certain of its wholly owned subsidiaries had entered into a binding
agreement with certain Newmont Corporation subsidiaries to acquire,
subject to certain conditions being satisfied, a 70% ownership
interest in the Havieron gold-copper project (consolidating
Greatland's ownership of Havieron to 100%), 100% ownership of the
Telfer gold-copper mine, and other related interests in assets in
the Paterson region (the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition).
Completion of the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition is subject to the
satisfaction of certain conditions precedent and is targeted to
occur during Q4 2024.
On 10 September 2024, in connection with the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition,
a fully underwritten institutional placing to
raise US$325 million (c. £248.6 million ) (Institutional Placing) and retail offer
to raise US$8.8 million (c. £6.7 million) (Retail Offer), both before costs, were
announced. The Institutional Placing was oversubscribed and
successfully closed on 11 September 2024, and the Retail Offer was
oversubscribed and successfully closed on 12 September 2024.
On 30 September 2024, a general meeting of shareholders approved
the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition and the issue of shares under the
Institutional Placing, the Retail Offer, and to a subsidiary of
Newmont Corporation pursuant to the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition. Completion of the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition is subject to the satisfaction of
certain conditions precedent and is targeted to occur during Q4
2024.
During the September 2023 quarter,
Greatland continued to advance preparations for a proposed
cross-listing on the ASX, which were significantly
progressed. In September 2023, having regard to the listing
timetable and activities and opportunities for the business,
Greatland decided to defer the ASX cross-listing. Greatland
is committed to a cross-listing on the ASX, targeted within six
months from completion of the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition.
In September 2023, Greatland
entered into a A$50 million (c. £26 million) unsecured standby debt
facility with cornerstone shareholder Wyloo Consolidated
Investments Pty Ltd (Wyloo), providing additional
flexibility for Greatland's funding requirements through calendar
year 2024. Wyloo currently holds approximately 8.5% of
Greatland shares post year end, A$7.0 million (c.£3.6 million ) was
drawn down, then subsequently repaid in full and the facility
terminated.
Havieron, Western Australia (Greatland:
30%)
Havieron is an exciting underground gold-copper development
project and is the cornerstone of Greatland's strategic position in
the highly prospective Paterson province in the East Pilbara region
of Western Australia.
Discovered by Greatland in 2018, Havieron is currently owned
and managed in joint venture with Newmont Corporation (NYSE:NEM;
Newmont) which, through a
wholly-owned subsidiary, holds a 70% joint venture interest in
Havieron as manager of the Joint Venture).
Havieron has a Mineral Resource Estimate of
8.4Moz in total contained gold equivalent ounces
(AuEq1), prepared by Greatland in accordance with
JORC. As noted above, pursuant to the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition Greatland will consolidate 100% ownership of Havieron,
with completion of the acquisition targeted to occur during Q4
2024.
Early works commenced in January 2021 and are advanced,
including development of the underground main access decline
through 80% of the total depth to the top of the Havieron ore
body.
|
1 The gold equivalent (AuEq) is based on assumed prices of
US$1,700/oz Au and US$3.75/lb Cu for Mineral Resource and
metallurgical recoveries based on block metal grade, reporting
approximately at 87% for Au and 87% for Cu which in both cases
equates to a formula of approximately AuEq = Au (g/t) + 1.6* Cu
(%). It is the company's opinion that all the elements included in
the metal equivalents calculation have a reasonable potential to be
recovered and sold.
Newmont became Greatland's joint
venture partner and manager of the Havieron joint venture on 6
November 2023, following completion of Newmont's acquisition of
Newcrest Mining Limited (previously ASX:NCM).
During the year, development of
the decline progressed a further 353 metres, with total development
at Havieron having reached in excess of 3,060 metres, including
over 2,110 metres of advance in the main access decline (as of
30 June 2024). There are approximately 80 vertical
metres of the total 420 metres of vertical distance remaining
before the decline reaches the base of the Permian cover and top of
the Havieron orebody.
In October 2023, Greatland
announced a pause in development of the main access decline prior
to development through the lower confined aquifer (LCA) which is the final of three
aquifers before the decline reaches the top of the Havieron
orebody, to allow c. The pause commenced in the December 2023
quarter and depressurisation and hydrogeological data collection
and evaluation activities were completed. A robust predictive
hydrogeological model has been developed, based on measured real
time flow rates and pressure from depressurisation bore holes in
the LCA. Accordingly depressurisation and dewatering
requirements for the LCA are considered to be well
understood. Recommencement of underground development is
reliant on the permitting, construction and commissioning of an
additional three evaporation ponds at surface, and these approvals
are being progressed. Recommencement of the underground development
is not currently on the overall project development critical
path.
On 21 December 2023, Greatland
announced an updated Mineral Resource Estimate (MRE) for Havieron, prepared in
accordance with JORC, outlining an increase in the total gold
equivalent (AuEq) content to 8.4Moz, a 29% increase from
Greatland's previous March 2022 MRE (refer to Greatland's RNS of 21
December 2023 titled 'Havieron Mineral Resource Estimate
Update'). The update included a 32% increase in contained
gold equivalent metal in the higher confidence Indicated MRE
category. The update confirmed continuous mineralisation
between the Eastern Breccia and main Havieron Breccia domains, with
the definition of a new high grade "Link Zone".
On 22 February 2024, Newmont
announced an updated Mineral Reserve and Mineral Resource for
Havieron, prepared in accordance with the US Securities and
Exchange Commission's SK 1300 guidelines (SK 1300), which are different from
JORC. Refer to Greatland's RNS of 22 February 2024 titled
'Newmont Annual Reserves & Resources Statement' for further
information.
On 22 February 2024, Newmont also
announced its intention to divest its joint venture interest in
Havieron, as well as its 100% owned Telfer mining operations
located 45km west of Havieron, where ore from Havieron is
contemplated to be processed.
After the conclusion of the
financial year, on 10 September 2024 Greatland announced the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition, pursuant to which the Greatland group
will consolidate 100% ownership of Havieron and acquire 100%
ownership of the Telfer gold-copper mine and other related
interests in assets in the Paterson region. Completion of the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition is subject to the satisfaction of
certain conditions precedent and is targeted to occur during Q4
2024.
Paterson South Farm-In and Joint Venture Arrangement, Western
Australia (Greatland earning up to 75%)
In May 2023, Greatland entered into the Paterson South
farm-in and joint venture agreement with Rio Tinto Exploration Pty
Ltd (RTX), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of global mining group Rio Tinto, to accelerate
exploration at nine exploration licences (Paterson South Tenements) which
collectively cover 1,537km2 of highly prospective tenure
within the Paterson region of Western Australia, near
Havieron.
Greatland has the right to earn up to a 75% interest in the
Paterson South Tenements by spending at least A$21.1 million and
completing 24,500 metres of drilling as part of a two-stage farm-in
over seven years. During the period, Greatland achieved the
stage one minimum commitment under the farm-in arrangement by
completing 2,000 metres of drilling and A$1.1 million of
expenditure before 31 December 2024.
|
In late June 2023, Greatland
commenced its maiden exploration drilling campaign at the Paterson
South Tenements testing the Stingray and Decka targets.
Results of this drilling were announced in early November
2023. The rapid commencement of drilling on the Paterson South
Tenements within four weeks of entering into the farm-in and joint
venture arrangement is a testament to both the high quality of the
tenure and Greatland's drive to rapidly unlock greater value from
its Paterson region exploration portfolio.
During the year surface sampling
programs were undertaken on the Wilki Lakes (E45/5576) tenement,
the results of which are pending. A gravity survey was
undertaken on the Budjidowns (E45/4815) tenement, with drilling
anticipated in financial year 2025.
Juri, Western Australia (Greatland: 49%)
Juri is a joint venture between Greatland (49%) and Newmont
(51%) to explore the Paterson Range East and Black Hills
exploration licences located in the Paterson region, near
Havieron. Newmont has the right to earn up to a 75% interest
in the Juri tenements by spending up to a further A$17 million in
Stage 2 of the farm-in.
|
Greatland's Juri joint venture
partner Newcrest Operations Limited, now a wholly owned subsidiary
of Newmont, elected to assume management
of the Juri Joint Venture on 1 July 2023. Greatland and
Newmont are two of the largest landholders in the Paterson
region.
During the period, Newmont carried
out an airborne gravity survey over parts of the Juri Joint Venture
tenure, the results of which are continuing to be reviewed by the
Joint Venture and will be incorporated into future on-ground work
plans.
After the conclusion of the
financial year, on 10 September 2024 Greatland announced
the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition, pursuant to
which Greatland will acquire Newmont's 51% joint venture interest
in Juri, therefore consolidating 100% ownership of the Juri
project. Completion of the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition is subject to the satisfaction of
certain conditions precedent and is targeted to occur during Q4
2024.
Exploration, Western Australia (Greatland:
100%)
Greater Paterson
Greatland's 100% owned Paterson region exploration projects
comprise of the Scallywag and Canning projects:
§ Scallywag comprises four
wholly-owned granted exploration licences: Scallywag, Pascalle,
Rudall and Black Hills North located adjacent to and around
Havieron. Exploration work is focused on the discovery of
intrusion related gold-copper deposits similar to Havieron, Telfer
and Winu.
§ Canning comprises two
wholly-owned granted exploration licences: Canning and Salvation
Well located approximately 175km south-east of Havieron within the
south-eastern extensions of the Paterson region in Western
Australia. The tenements contain two large magnetic
'bullseye' anomalies similar to the Havieron deposit magnetic
signature.
|
During the year, Greatland
completed diamond core drilling on the
Scallywag exploration licence, with 10 holes completed for over
2,500 metres at the A35, A34, Pearl and Swan prospects, the results
of which were announced in December 2023. The drilling
program effectively tested previously defined electromagnetic and
geological targets, building Greatland's understanding of the
structure, stratigraphy and geochemistry of the ground.
Greatland completed ground
magneto-telluric (MT)
surveys of the Scallywag and Canning exploration licences during
the period. MT surveys are considered particularly effective
in areas of deep conductive cover when compared to standard
electromagnetic techniques as the signal only traverses the
conductive cover once, reducing the deleterious effect that this
has at the receiver(s). Modelling of the Scallywag MT survey
data identified a conductor at depth within a syncline fold
structure along trend from Havieron, referred to as the 'London'
prospect, which is now a high priority drill target for financial
year 2025.
During the period Greatland also
completed a soil sampling program at Scallywag, with assay results
under review.
Ernest Giles
The Ernest Giles project consists of five granted
wholly-owned adjoining exploration licences: Calanchini,
Peterswald, Westwood North, Westwood West and Mount Smith, which
are located approximately 250km north-east of the town of Laverton
in the Yilgarn region of Western Australia. Ernest Giles is
an underexplored Archean greenstone belt which lies within the
highly mineralised Yilgarn Craton, to the north of the world-class
Tropicana and Gruyere gold mines.
|
During the year important progress
was made at Ernest Giles.
In September 2023, Greatland
entered into a land access agreement with the Manta Rirrtinya
Native Title Holders. The agreement provides for the consent
to the grant of tenure to, and land access by, Greatland over
approximately 75% of the Ernest Giles project area.
In November 2023, Greatland
completed two diamond core drill holes at the Meadows
prospect at Ernest Giles, co-funded by the
Government of Western Australia's Exploration Incentive Scheme
drilling grant. The drilling results have provided important
geological and structural information.
The Ernest Giles footprint was
expanded during the year, with the grant of the Mount Smith (April
2024), and subsequent to year end, the grant of Westwood North and
Westwood West tenements (July 2024), and applications submitted for
Welstead Hill, Peterswald 2 and Peterswald 3. Granted tenure
now comprises 1,323km2 and covers more than 125km of
strike length.
Greatland's planned exploration
program at Ernest Giles for FY2025 includes a regional geophysics
program across the project tenure, as well as a targeted airborne
geophysics survey and 6,000m of drilling at the Meadows
prospect.
Panorama
The Panorama project consists of three granted wholly-owned
adjoining exploration licences: Panorama, Panorama North and
Panorama East, located in the Pilbara region of Western
Australia. The tenements are considered by Greatland to be
highly prospective for gold and nickel.
|
In November 2023 Greatland
announced the results of a surface sampling program at Panorama,
with results including 27 soil samples from the Ni_04 prospect
returning above 0.1% nickel over a 1.4km strike extent, and a peak
result of 0.3% nickel in a rock chip sample.
These samples sit within the
Dalton Suite ultramafics, which the results confirmed as nickel
enriched and a potential primary nickel sulphide host. The
large extent of the prospective Dalton Suite ultramafics within the
Panorama tenure, and the existence of several untested highly
prospective conductors, presents the potential for a substantial
nickel discovery at Panorama. Greatland is planning its next steps
to effectively test both the geochemical and geophysical anomalies
on the tenure.
Bromus
The Bromus project consists of two granted wholly-owned
adjoining exploration licences: Bromus and Bromus West which are
considered prospective for nickel, lithium and gold, located
approximately 20km southwest of the town of Norseman in southern
Western Australia.
|
During the period the lithium
prospectivity of the Bromus project tenure was assessed and
on-ground activities undertaken.
Mt Egerton
The Mt Egerton project consists of one granted wholly-owned
exploration licence: Woodlands; and two exploration applications
Munjang and Mt Egerton, located approximately 230km north of the
town of Meekatharra gold camp in central Western Australia.
The Mt Egerton project is considered prospective for gold and
copper.
|
During the period the Mt Egerton
project commenced with the grant of the inaugural Woodlands
tenement on 30 April 2024. Land access agreements were also
progressed during the period.
Principal Risks and Uncertainties
Management of the business and the
execution of the Board's strategy during the year was subject to a
number of key risks and uncertainties, our approach to managing
these are detailed below:
Risk
|
Description
|
Key Mitigators
|
Occupational health and
safety
|
Safety risks are inherent in
exploration and mining activities and include both internal and external factors
requiring consideration to reduce the likelihood of negative
impacts. The current highest risk, due to the geological spread of
exploration activities, is associated with transportation of people
to and from the project areas.
|
Every Director and employee of the
Company is committed to promoting and maintaining a safe and
sustainable workplace environment. The Company regularly reviews
occupational health and safety policies and compliance with those
policies. The Company also engages where required with external
occupational health and safety expert consultants to ensure that
policies and procedures are appropriate as the Company expands its
activity levels.
|
Commodity price risk
|
The principal commodities that are
the focus of our exploration and development efforts (precious
metals and base metals assets) are subject to highly cyclical
patterns in global demand and supply, and consequently, the price
of those commodities can be highly volatile.
|
On an ongoing basis we look at
opportunities to further diversify our commodity portfolio. In
addition, we continuously review our costs as well as consider
hedging strategies to make our projects more resilient.
|
Havieron Feasibility Study and
Decision to Mine
|
A Decision to Mine between the
Havieron Joint Venture participants is required to commence
construction, development and commercial scale mining operations at
Havieron. Before a Decision to Mine can be made, a Havieron
Feasibility Study is required, which Newcrest Operations as the
Havieron Joint Venture Manager is responsible for preparing.
Preparation of the Havieron Feasibility Study is
ongoing.
|
Various workstreams to support the
Havieron Feasibility Study are continuing to be progressed with
several value enhancing options underway to maximise value and
de-risk the project.
|
Funding Havieron
development
|
Raising sufficient debt and equity
to fund the Havieron Project is crucial to enable the Group to fast
track the development of Havieron including early works and mine
development activities.
|
In September 2023, Greatland
entered into a A$50 million (approx. £26.0 million) unsecured
standby debt facility with cornerstone shareholder Wyloo, providing
additional flexibility for Greatland's funding requirements through
calendar year 2024.
Subsequent to year end, in
connection with the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition,
a fully underwritten institutional placing to
raise US$325 million (approx. £248.6
million) (Institutional
Placing) and retail offer to raise US$8.8 million (approx.
£6.7 million) (Retail
Offer) were announced. The Institutional Placing and the
Retail Offer were oversubscribed. The equity raise included working
capital funds to provide further flexibility for Greatland to fund
the Havieron development going forward.
|
Recruiting and retaining highly
skilled directors and employees
|
The Company's ability to execute
its strategy is highly dependent on the skills and abilities of its
people.
|
We undertake ongoing initiatives
to foster strong staff engagement and ensure that remuneration
packages are competitive in the market.
|
Mineral exploration
discovery
|
Inherent with mineral exploration
is that there is no guarantee that the Company can identify a
mineral resource that can be extracted economically.
Exploration work is conducted on a
systematic basis. More specifically, exploration work is carried
out in a phased, results-based fashion and leverages a wide range
of exploration methods including modern geochemical and geophysical
techniques and various drilling methods.
|
The Board regularly reviews our
exploration and development programmes and allocates capital in a
manner that it believes will maximise risk-adjusted return on
capital, within our capital management plan.
We apply advanced exploration
techniques to undercover areas and regions that we believe are
relatively under-explored.
We focus our activities on
jurisdictions that we believe represent low political and
operational risk. We operate in jurisdictions where our team has
considerable on the ground experience. Presently all of the
Company's projects are in Australia, a country with established
mining codes, stable government, skilled labour force, excellent
infrastructure and well-established mining industry.
|
As a result of the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition, if completed, the Company's business and activities
will change substantially, and accordingly management of the
business and the execution of the Board's strategy will become
subject to different and additional risks. The Company's
Admission Document dated 10 September 2024 describes the key risks
that the enlarged Company group will become subject to as a result
of the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition.
Shaun Day
Managing Director
18 November 2024
OUR BOARD
The qualifications, experience and
other directorships of the Directors in office for the year ending
30 June 2024 and up to the date of this report are detailed
below.
Name
|
Experience and background
|
Mark
Barnaba
Independent Non-Executive Chairman
(Appointed 7 December 2022)
|
Mark is a highly experienced
investment banker and corporate advisor, having focused
predominantly in the natural resources sector. He currently serves
as Deputy Chairman and Lead Independent Director of the world's
fourth largest iron ore producer Fortescue Ltd, and as Chairman of
AirTrunk (a cloud-based data centre company operating in
Asia-Pacific and Japan).
Mark also chairs the Hospital
Benefit Fund Investment Committee and was previously on the Board
of the Reserve Bank of Australia.
|
Elizabeth
Gaines
Independent Non-Executive Director and Deputy
Chair
(Appointed 7 December 2022)
|
Elizabeth is a highly experienced
business leader with extensive international experience as a Chief
Executive Officer. She has significant experience in the resources
sector and is an executive director of Fortescue Ltd, where she was
previously Chief Executive Officer and presided over a heralded
period of operational delivery and significant growth in
shareholder value.
Elizabeth is a board member of the
Victor Chang Cardiac Institute, West Coast Eagles Football Club and
the Curtin University Advisory Board.
|
Shaun Day
Managing
Director
(Appointed 15 December 2020)
|
Shaun is Managing Director of
Greatland Gold plc. Shaun has over 25 years of experience in
executive and commercial roles across mining, infrastructure and
investment banking.
Prior to joining the Company,
Shaun was Chief Financial Officer of Northern Star Resources
Limited, an ASX100 company and a global-scale Australian gold
producer. Prior to this, Shaun was Chief Financial Officer of SGX
listed Sakari Resources Plc which operated multiple mines ahead of
its takeover.
Shaun is Non-executive Chairman of
Blue Ocean Monitoring Limited, a non-executive director of ASX
listed Aurumin Limited and a member of the Senate of the University
of Western Australia.
|
James (Jimmy)
Wilson
Non-Executive Director
(Appointed 12 September 2022)
|
Jimmy is a highly experienced
mining and natural resources executive with deep operational
experience across a range of commodities and jurisdictions. He
spent more than 25 years with one of the world's biggest mining
companies BHP and held various senior executive positions including
President of the Iron Ore, Energy Coal and Stainless Steel
Materials divisions.
Jimmy was appointed to the Export
Finance Australia board in December 2020 for a three year term,
which was renewed in December 2023 for a further three
years.
|
Michael Alexander (Alex)
Borrelli
Senior
Independent Non-Executive Director
(Appointed 18 April 2016)
|
Alex is a senior Non-Executive
Director of the Company. Alex qualified as a Chartered Accountant
and has many years' experience in investment banking encompassing
flotations, takeovers, and mergers and acquisitions for private and
quoted companies.
Alex is also a director of UK
listed companies Bradda Head Lithium Limited, Red Rock Resources
plc, Kendrick Resources plc and Tiger Royalties and Investments
plc.
|
Yasmin
Broughton
Independent Non-Executive Director
(Appointed 2 May 2023)
|
Yasmin is a qualified lawyer with
significant experience as a non-executive director in a diverse
range of industries with a particular focus on natural resources.
With over 20 years of experience working with ASX-listed companies,
Yasmin has a deep understanding of governance, risk management,
compliance and regulation. Yasmin currently serves as a
non-executive director of Wright Prospecting, RAC WA Holdings Pty
Ltd, RAC Insurance Pty Ltd, Synergy (Electricity Generation and
Retail Corporation) and VOC Group Limited.
Yasmin has previously served as
non-executive director of Resolute Mining (ASX/LSE-listed gold
producer), Western Areas (ASX-listed nickel producer) and the
Insurance Commission of Western Australia.
|
Paul
Hallam
Independent Non-Executive Director
(Appointed 1 September 2021)
|
Paul is a senior mining industry
professional with more than 40 years of Australian and
international resource experience across a range of commodities
including both surface and underground mining. He has global
operational and corporate experience from his executive roles
including Director of Operations with Fortescue Ltd, Executive
General Manager of Developments and Projects with Newcrest Mining,
Director of Victorian Operations with Alcoa as well as Executive
General Manager of Base and Precious Metals at North
Ltd.
Since his retirement in 2011, Paul
has advised several boards as a non-executive director. Paul also
currently serves on the board of CODA Minerals Ltd where he is the
chair of the Audit and Risk committee.
|
Clive
Latcham
Independent Non-Executive Director
(Appointed 15 October 2018)
|
Clive is a chemical engineer and
mineral economist with over thirty years' experience in senior
roles in the mining sector. Clive joined the Company from
Environmental Resource Management, one of the world's leading
sustainability consultancy groups, where he worked as Senior
External Advisor, and advisor to the chairman and chief executive
officer.
Prior to his role at Environmental
Resource Management, Clive worked as an independent advisor to
private equity and mining consultancy firms, and spent nine years
in senior roles with Rio Tinto. During his time at Rio Tinto, Clive
spent four years as Copper Group Mining Executive, where he was
responsible for managing Rio Tinto's investments in the operating
businesses of Escondida in Chile, Grasberg in Indonesia, and
Palabora in South Africa and for the initial development of new
projects and acquisitions, including La Granja in Peru and La
Sampala in Indonesia.
|
DIRECTORS' REPORT
The Directors present their report
on the consolidated entity (Greatland or the Group) consisting of the parent entity,
Greatland Gold Plc (Company) and the entities it controlled
at the end of the year ended 30 June 2024.
Directors
The Directors of Greatland in
office during the year and until the date of this report, their
qualifications, experience and other directorships held in listed
companies, are set out on pages 14 to 15 of the Annual
Report.
Directors Interest
The Directors' holdings of shares
and options in the Company as at 30 June 2024 were as
follows:
Director
|
Number of Shares
|
Number of Options
|
Number of Performance Rights
|
Mark Barnaba
|
-
|
100,000,000
|
-
|
Elizabeth Gaines
|
-
|
55,000,000
|
-
|
Shaun Day
|
1,089,000
|
85,000,0001
|
15,898,737
|
James Wilson
|
-
|
40,000,000
|
-
|
Alex Borrelli
|
35,403,372
|
-
|
-
|
Yasmin Broughton
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Paul Hallam
|
-
|
40,000,000
|
-
|
Clive Latcham
|
3,850,000
|
-
|
-
|
1 Inclusive of Employee Retention Rights and Employee
Co-Investment Options as described in the Remuneration
Report.
It is noted that:
§ On 1
October 2024, certain directors purchased shares in the Company by
way of subscription under the equity fundraising associated
with the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition, as follows:
Director
|
Number of Shares pre fundraising
|
Number of Shares purchased
|
Number of Shares post fundraising
|
Mark Barnaba
|
-
|
1,589,303
|
1,589,303
|
Elizabeth Gaines
|
-
|
1,059,535
|
1,059,535
|
Shaun Day
|
1,089,000
|
1,589,303
|
2,678,303
|
James Wilson
|
-
|
794,651
|
794,651
|
Yasmin Broughton
|
-
|
529,767
|
529,767
|
Paul Hallam
|
-
|
794,651
|
794,651
|
§ On 16
October 2024, after the end of the financial year, Mr Day was
issued a further 10,504,862 performance rights as detailed in the
Remuneration Report.
Principal activities
The principal activities of the
Group during the year consisted of the early works development,
feasibility study and exploration of the Havieron gold-copper
project and the exploration and evaluation of mineral tenements in
Australia.
Results and dividends
§ Cash
position at 31 October 2024 of £245.5 million and £4.8 million at
30 June 2024 (2023: £31.1 million)
§ Closing
debt balance of £41.5 million at 30 June
2024 (2023: £41.5 million)
§ Net
assets of £41.0 million
at 30 June 2024 (2023: £52.5 million)
§ Havieron project costs capitalised of £16.4
million (2023: £23.4 million) excluding interest
during the year
§ Loss
before finance items and share-based payments of
£11.6 million (2023: £11.0
million); statutory loss of £14.9 million (2023: £21.1 million)
§ Exploration expense of £4.2 million (2023: £3.4 million) for
the year
Going Concern
Greatland's principal activities
during the year include the development of Havieron.
At 30 June 2024, the Group had net current assets
of £1.8 million
(2023: £35.4 million), with cash of £4.8 million (2023: £31.1 million)
and advanced Havieron joint venture cash contributions of £1.5
million (2023: £12.6 million).
After the conclusion of the
financial year, on 10 September 2024, Greatland announced the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition and an associated fully underwritten
institutional placing to raise US$325
million (£248.6 million) and retail offer
to raise US$8.8 million (£6.7
million). On 30 September 2024, a
general meeting of shareholders approved the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition and the issue of shares under the Institutional
Placing, the Retail Offer, and to a subsidiary of Newmont
Corporation pursuant to the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition.
Greatland has a cash position of £245.5 million at 31 October
2024.
As part of the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition on 10 September 2024, Greatland Pty Ltd signed a
non-legally binding Letter of Support from its banking syndicate
comprising of the Australian and New Zealand Banking Group Limited,
HSBC Bank and ING Bank (Australia) (together, the Banking Syndicate). The Letter of
Support provides that the Banking Syndicate are fully supportive
and interested in the provision of a A$775 million (£406 million)
facility which includes a working capital facility of A$100 million
(£52 million), for the funding of Havieron. In addition, a
commitment letter from the Banking Syndicate was signed on 10
September 2024 for a facility of A$100 million (£52 million)
including a working capital facility of A$75 million (£39
million).
In addition, Greatland had in
place a A$50 million (£26.0 million) standby loan facility with
Wyloo undrawn at year end. Post year end A$7 million (£3.6 million)
was drawn down and then subsequently repaid from the proceeds of
the equity placing noted above, and the facility
terminated.
If required, the Group has a
number of options available to manage liquidity
including:
§ significantly reduce expenditure on its own exploration
programmes;
§ significantly reduce corporate costs; and
§ raising
additional funding through debt, equity or a combination of both,
which the Group considers it has the ability to do, should it be
required and has demonstrated an ability to do so in the
past.
Having prepared forecasts for the
next twelve months, based on current resources and assessing
methods of obtaining additional finance, the Directors believe the
Group has sufficient resources to meet its obligations.
Should the Group not achieve the
matters set out above, there may be significant uncertainty about
whether it will continue as a going concern and therefore whether
it would be able to realise its assets and extinguish its
liabilities in the normal course of business and at the amounts
stated in the financial report.
Taking these matters into
consideration, the Directors continue to adopt the going concern
basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements.
The financial statements do not include the adjustments that
would be required should the going concern basis of preparation no
longer be appropriate.
Likely developments and expected results
A review of the current and future
development of the Group's business is given in the Strategic
Report.
Risk Management
The Board considers risk
assessment to be important in achieving its strategic objectives.
There is a process of evaluation of performance targets
through regular reviews by senior management to forecasts.
Project milestones and timelines are regularly
reviewed.
A risk register is maintained by
the Company that identifies key risks in areas including corporate
strategy, financial, staff, occupational health and safety,
environmental and traditional owner engagement. The register
is reviewed periodically and is updated as and when necessary, with
all employees and directors being responsible for identifying,
managing and mitigating risks.
Refer to the 'Principle Risks and
Uncertainties' section above for detailed information on the
principal risks and uncertainties and for further detailed
information on the financial risks refer to note
15
Key performance indicators
The Board has defined the
following Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) during the year to monitor and
assess the performance of the Group as it advances from an
exploration company into a resource development company.
Long-Term Incentive KPIs
The following KPIs apply to the
FY24 Performance Rights, defined and described in the Remuneration
Report, which have a three-year performance period from 1 July 2023
to 30 June 2026.
Performance Target
|
Rationale
|
Our
performance in 2024
|
Total Shareholder Return (TSR) is equal to or
greater than that of the VanEck Junior Gold Miners ETF
(GDXJ).
|
The performance of Greatland's
share price demonstrates the total return to the shareholders. Our
strategy aims to maximise shareholder returns through the commodity
cycle, and TSR is a direct measure of that.
|
TSR performance for the financial
year 2024 was negative 1.5%, compared to 15% for GDXJ.
|
Investor engagement
The Group completes its proposed
ASX cross-listing (if directed by the Board), actively engages with
a broad cross section of investors and grows the proportion of its
shares held by institutional investors, specifically targeting
non-private investor ownership of 40.0% by the end of the
performance period, with the assessed outcome being proportional to
the increase achieved.
|
The proposed ASX cross-listing is
an important pillar to create a fit-for-purpose platform and pursue
objectives including increasing equity research and institutional
ownership, enhanced capital markets profile, access to deeper pools
of capital to support longer term growth, and enhanced flexibility
for growth initiatives including corporate and asset level
transactions.
Increased institutional ownership
of Greatland shares is expected to support greater liquidity and
interest in Greatland shares.
|
During the year Greatland advanced
preparations for its proposed cross-listing on the ASX. In
September 2023, Greatland decided to defer the ASX cross-listing to
optimise the outcome for its shareholders. Greatland remains
committed to listing on the ASX at the appropriate time and is well
positioned by the work undertaken to date to efficiently resume and
complete the ASX listing process.
Greatland engaged significantly
with investors during the year, including through conferences,
investor roadshows, townhall events and other
engagements.
|
Sustainability and Environment
Greatland complies with its
obligations under environmental laws and regulations without
serious breaches or environmental incidents, and enhances
governance, policies and reporting in respect of sustainability and
environmental matters including publication of Sustainability
Reports annually in the ordinary course or as approved by the
Board.
|
Greatland is committed to safe,
responsible and sustainable exploration and development. The
Company continues to focus on improving health and safety training
and processes, and on further strengthening relationships with the
indigenous communities in the areas that we operate, as well as on
our ESG focus for developing a responsible and sustainable
resources company.
|
Greatland complied with its
obligations under environmental laws and regulations without
serious breaches or environmental incidents.
With the Board's approval,
Greatland did not publish a Sustainability Report in
FY24.
|
Performance Target
|
Rationale
|
Our performance in 2024
|
Native Title and Environment
Greatland maintains
demonstratively positive relations with all Native Title groups in
respect of the land it operates on, preserves heritage sites of
cultural significance as required to comply with applicable
permits, and remains in compliance with its obligations under land
access agreements and applicable laws and regulations.
|
In areas that the Group operates,
we are committed to understanding, respecting and responsibly
managing our impacts on Aboriginal cultural heritage, and
co-operating and forming positive relationships with Aboriginal
communities.
|
Through formal processes outlined
in Land Access Agreements, Greatland has engaged Traditional Owners
to undertake several surveys in advance of field activities.
Additionally, Greatland has worked alongside Aboriginal consultants
for ground disturbance activities where cultural heritage
monitoring has been deemed appropriate through survey or by
direction of the prescribed body corporate.
Greatland continues to work with our
many traditional owners to understand and manage our potential
impacts to Aboriginal cultural heritage.
FY23
Number of Surveys Engaged
Incl.
Planned
11
Cultural Heritage Survey- Days
Completed
7
Cultural Heritage Monitoring- Days
Undertaken
76
|
Feasibility Study for Havieron
Greatland actively manages its
relationship with its joint venture partner and critically reviews,
analyses and provides detailed input (based on its review and
analysis) on a timely basis into the Havieron Feasibility
Study.
|
Havieron provides an outstanding
cornerstone project on which to develop and pursue the Company's
aim to become a multi asset producer. It enables the Company to
leverage our established footprint and proven methodology in the
Paterson region, one of the world's most attractive jurisdictions
for discoveries of tier-one, gold-copper deposits.
|
The Feasibility Study for the
Havieron project continued during the year and explored further
value enhancing options to maximise value and derisk the
project. In parallel Greatland completed its own work to
identify and assess optimised development pathways.
|
Funding and balance sheet management
Greatland has adequate liquidity
to meet short, medium and long term cashflow requirements,
including to fund the Havieron development. Greatland
maintains positive relationships with its bank lending group and
other prospective debt financiers.
|
Raising sufficient debt and equity
to fund the Company's share of the Havieron development is crucial
to enable the completion of development of Havieron including early
works and other mine development activities, plus accelerate
exploration activities at the Group's 100% owned licences to target
new discoveries.
|
During the financial year,
Greatland executed a A$50 million (£26 million) standby loan
facility with Wyloo and met all of its cashflow requirements
including funding its share of the Havieron development. Post year
end Greatland has executed a successful equity raise to fund the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition.
|
JORC Resource
Greatland grows its Mineral
Resource base (as per Greatland's March 2022 Mineral Resource
Estimate) by at least 20% (noting that joint venture mining
tenements are assessed on a 100% basis).
|
Growth of the JORC Resource is a
crucial component to Greatland's long term strategy.
|
During the year, in December 2023,
Greatland released an updated Mineral Resource Estimate for
Havieron outlining an increase in the
total gold equivalent content to 8.4Moz, a 29% increase from
Greatland's previous March 2022 Mineral Resource estimate.
Importantly, the update included a 32% increase in contained gold
equivalent metal in the higher confidence Indicated MRE
category.
|
Performance Target
|
Rationale
|
Our performance in 2024
|
Corporate development
Greatland demonstrates success in
pursuing portfolio enhancing business development opportunities
through identifying and presenting such opportunities to the Board
for consideration.
|
Corporate development activity is
a crucial component to amplify Greatland's growth strategy and
support the transition of the business from an explorer to a
developer and producer.
|
Significant corporate activity was
undertaken during the year, including progressing the proposed ASX
listing, and consideration and analysis of potential acquisition
opportunities.
|
Short-Term Incentive KPIS
The following KPIs applied to the
FY24 Short-Term Incentive, defined and described in the
Remuneration Report.
Element
|
KPI
|
Our performance in 2024
|
Strategic
|
Demonstrate active engagement with
Newmont on Havieron operations and development including providing
detailed feedback on all studies etc received from Newmont, and in
parallel define and advance Greatland's own development
pathway.
|
Successfully influenced JV
Committee decision-making in a number of respects.
Greatland defined a parallel
development and mine plan for Havieron, which was independently
reviewed and reported on in the Competent Person's Report contained
within the Company's Admission Document dated 10 September 2024 in
connection with the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition.
|
Ensuring that Greatland has
adequate liquidity to meet its short and medium term capital
requirements, prioritising funding of Havieron joint venture
commitments.
|
Liquidity was managed throughout
the year and all Havieron joint venture commitments were
met.
|
Complete targeted exploration
activities within budget and ensure optimisation of such
exploration.
|
Greatland completed all intended
exploration activities in H1 FY24, within the applicable budgets;
multiple high priority targets were tested, including Ernest Giles,
Paterson South, Scallywag and Panorama
In H2 FY24 Greatland's exploration activities were rationalised at
the Board's direction to enable management of liquidity and
progress of the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition, with a focus on
retaining and gaining access to priority exploration targets for
FY25.
New high priority targets were identified and acquired (through
tenement applications), including Mt Egerton and
Yannarie.
|
Demonstrably engage with
institutional investors and add new institutional investors to the
register, specifically targeting increasing the percentage of
non-private investors.
|
Significant institutional
engagement occurred during the year, albeit non-private investor
ownership increased only modestly during the year.
|
Demonstrably pursue business
development opportunities including potential mergers, acquisitions
and/or initial public offerings on alternative securities
exchange(s).
|
During the year, significant
effort and progress was made in respect of the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition, which was announced subsequent to year end on 10
September 2024.
|
Completion of an updated Mineral
Resource Estimate with independent review.
|
Greatland Havieron Mineral
Resource Estimate was completed and announced in December
2023.
|
Health, Safety, Environment and Community
|
Active engagement with joint
venture partner on health and safety.
|
Regular and effective engagement
and information sharing occurred between Greatland and JV
partner.
|
Complete and implement Greatland
Mine Safety Management Plan for Greatland controlled operations;
complete external review of the Plan.
|
Plan and external review
completed, concluding that the current safety management system,
equipment and personnel culture, capability and training are fit
for purpose for the current level of operations.
|
Greatland remains compliant with
workplace health and safety legislation and is free from any
proceedings brought by the regulator in relation to breaches of
applicable health and safety legislation.
|
Greatland remained compliant with
workplace health and safety legislation and no proceedings were
brought by the regulator in relation to breaches of applicable
health and safety legislation.
|
No significant adverse health,
environmental or social incidents occur at Greatland controlled
sites and operations.
|
No significant adverse
incidents.
|
Personal Objectives
|
Set by each employee's manager and
approved by the Managing Director (with the Managing Director's
performance targets set by the Board).
|
Dependent on individual
outcomes.
|
Share Capital
Information relating to shares
issued during the year is given in note 14 to the
accounts.
Substantial Shareholdings
On 30 June 2024 and 31 October
2024, the following were registered as being interested in 3% or
more of the Company's ordinary share capital:
|
30 June
2024
|
|
Ordinary shares of £0.001
each
|
Share %
|
HARGREAVES LANSDOWN (NOMINEES)
LIMITED (15942)
|
618,675,151
|
12.15%
|
LYNCHWOOD NOMINEES LIMITED
(2006420)
|
450,757,257
|
8.86%
|
INTERACTIVE INVESTOR SERVICES
NOMINEES LIMITED (SMKTISAS)
|
378,973,658
|
7.44%
|
HARGREAVES LANSDOWN (NOMINEES)
LIMITED (HLNOM)
|
333,249,833
|
6.55%
|
HARGREAVES LANSDOWN (NOMINEES)
LIMITED (VRA)
|
316,516,744
|
6.22%
|
BARCLAYS DIRECT INVESTING NOMINEES
LIMITED (CLIENT1)
|
226,297,222
|
4.45%
|
INTERACTIVE INVESTOR SERVICES
NOMINEES LIMITED (SMKTNOMS)
|
210,906,067
|
4.14%
|
HSDL NOMINEES LIMITED
(MAXI)
|
196,229,024
|
3.85%
|
STATE STREET NOMINEES LIMITED
(OM02)
|
185,273,644
|
3.64%
|
|
31 October
2024
|
|
Ordinary shares of £0.001
each
|
Share %
|
LYNCHWOOD NOMINEES LIMITED
(2006420)
|
1,165,062,063
|
11.19%
|
FOREST NOMINEES LIMITED
(GC1)
|
819,536,735
|
7.87%
|
HARGREAVES LANSDOWN (NOMINEES)
LIMITED (15942)
|
700,180,962
|
6.73%
|
VIDACOS NOMINEES LIMITED
(FGN)
|
548,686,221
|
5.27%
|
INTERACTIVE INVESTOR SERVICES
NOMINEES LIMITED (SMKTISAS)
|
420,508,315
|
4.04%
|
HARGREAVES LANSDOWN (NOMINEES)
LIMITED (HLNOM)
|
369,386,142
|
3.55%
|
HARGREAVES LANSDOWN (NOMINEES)
LIMITED (VRA)
|
351,654,663
|
3.38%
|
Additionally, the Company has been
notified, in accordance with DTR 5 of the FCA's Disclosure and
Transparency Rules, or is aware, of the following interests in its
ordinary shares of shareholders with an interest of 3% or more of
the Company's ordinary share capital, as at 30 June 2024 and 31
October 2024:
|
30 June
2024
|
|
Ordinary shares of £0.001
each
|
Share %
|
Wyloo Consolidated Investments Pty
Ltd
|
430,024,390
|
8.45%
|
Van Eck Associates
Corporation
|
222,779,994
|
4.38%
|
|
31 October
2024
|
|
Ordinary shares of £0.001
each
|
Share %
|
Wyloo Consolidated Investments Pty
Ltd
|
1,105,136,117
|
10.62%
|
Tembo Capital Holdings Guernsey
Ltd
|
796,770,833
|
7.65%
|
Firetrail Investments Pty
Ltd
|
669,619,721
|
6.43%
|
Political donations
During the period there were no
political donations (2023: nil).
Auditors
PKF Littlejohn LLP has served as
the Company's auditors since 2020. The Directors will place a
resolution before the annual general meeting to reappoint PKF
Littlejohn LLP as auditors for the coming year.
PKF Littlejohn LLP has signified
its willingness to continue in office as auditor.
Directors' Indemnity
The Company has maintained
Directors' and Officers' insurance during the year. Such provisions
remain in force at the date of this report. 4
Events after the reporting period
Telfer and Havieron Acquisition
Subsequent to year end the
Greatland announced:
§ On 10
September 2024, certain wholly owned subsidiaries of Greatland Gold
plc, including Greatland Pty Ltd, had entered into a binding
agreement with certain Newmont Corporation subsidiaries to acquire,
subject to certain conditions being satisfied, a 70% ownership
interest in the Havieron project (consolidating Greatland's
ownership of Havieron to 100%), 100% ownership of the Telfer
gold-copper mine, and other related interests in assets in the
Paterson region;
§ The
formal completion of the transaction is subject to the satisfaction of
certain conditions precedent and is targeted to occur during Q4
2024;
§ Total
consideration face value for the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition is
US$475 million (£373.1 million) made up of US$155.1 million (£121.7
million) cash payment, US$52.4 million (£41.5 million) repayment of
the outstanding Havieron Joint Venture loan, US$167.5 million
(£131.4 million) in new Greatland Gold plc shares to be issued to
Newmont and US$100 million (£78.5 million) in deferred cash
consideration. The total estimated fair value consideration is
US$420.8 million (£330.5 million);
§ The
cash consideration will be funded through a fully underwritten
institutional placing and retail offer approved by the shareholders
on 30 September 2024; and
§ At the
date of this report the initial business combination accounting is
incomplete as formal completion of the transaction is still subject
to certain condition precedents, including regulatory
approvals. The business combination
accounting will be completed within 12 months from formal
completion of the transaction as per IFRS 3 Business Combinations.
Greatland Placing
The Company announced the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition along with an associated fully
underwritten institutional placing to raise US$325 million (£248.6
million) and retail offer to raise US$8.8 million (£6.7 million).
On 30 September 2024, a general meeting of shareholders approved
the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition and the issue of shares. The
proceeds of the placing will be used to finance the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition, repayment of the £41.5 million (US$52.4 million)
outstanding Havieron JV loan to Newmont, transaction costs and
expenses in connection with the Acquisition and Placing and working
capital requirements.
Related party transactions
The following directors and
officers of the Company participated in the share placing in
September 2024 at an issue price of £0.048 per share, as
follows:
|
Number of Shares
Subscribed
|
£
|
Directors / Officers
|
|
|
Mark Barnaba
|
1,589,303
|
76,287
|
Elizabeth Gaines
|
1,059,535
|
50,858
|
Shaun Day
|
1,589,303
|
76,287
|
James (Jimmy) Wilson
|
794,651
|
38,143
|
Yasmin Broughton
|
529,767
|
25,429
|
Paul Hallam
|
794,651
|
38,143
|
Dean Horton
|
211,773
|
10,165
|
Damien Stephens
|
317,661
|
15,248
|
Total
|
6,886,644
|
330,560
|
Grant of employee incentive options
On 16 October 2024, Greatland
granted 25,000,000 Retention Rights at £0.119, 17,496,137 FY24
Performance Rights and 39,855,249 FY25 Performance Rights at an
exercise price of £0.001 to employees under the Company's employee
share plan. Collectively the rights are an important element in the
attraction and retention of individuals pivotal to Greatland's
growth and their alignment with shareholder outcomes. Further
details are in the Remuneration Report.
Standby loan facility
Subsequent to year end, in July
the Company executed a drawdown of A$7 million (£3.6 million) of
the unsecured A$50 million (£26.0 million) standby facility with
Wyloo. The loan was then subsequently repaid in full from the
equity proceeds and the facility terminated.
Streamlined energy and carbon reporting
("SECR")
Greenhouse gas emissions, energy consumption and energy efficiency
disclosures have not been provided because the Company has consumed
less than 40,000 kWh of energy during the period in the
UK.
Corporate Governance
A corporate governance statement
is included in the Annual Report.
Control Procedures
The Board has approved financial
budgets and cash forecasts. In addition, it has implemented
procedures to ensure compliance with accounting standards and
effective reporting.
Environmental Responsibility
The Company is aware of the
potential impact that its subsidiary companies and operations may
have on the environment. The Company ensures that it and its
subsidiaries at a minimum comply with the local regulatory
requirements regarding the environment.
Cultural awareness
The Company continues to engage
with the traditional land owners to understand and respect cultural
heritage as a necessary part in obtaining access to projects across
its Australian operations and operate within the appropriate
protocols.
Health and Safety
The Group aims to achieve and
maintain a high standard of workplace health, safety and wellbeing.
To achieve this objective, the Group provides mental health
wellbeing training, mentoring and supervision for employees and
ongoing pastoral care support plus regularly reviewing and
implementing high standards for workplace safety.
Employment Policies
The Group is committed to
promoting policies which ensure that high calibre employees are
attracted, retained and motivated, to ensure the ongoing success
for the business. Employees and those who seek to work within the
Group are treated equally regardless of gender, marital status,
disability, race, ethnicity or any other basis. We provide equal
opportunities for career development and promotion as well as
providing employees with appropriate training
opportunities.
Provision of Information to Auditor
So far as each of the Directors
is aware at the
time this report is approved:
§ there
is no relevant audit information of which the Company's auditor is
unaware; and
§ the
Directors have taken all steps that they ought to have taken to
make themselves aware of any relevant audit information and to
establish that the auditor is aware of that information.
By order of the Board
Shaun Day
Managing Director
18 November 2024
PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES
1
Corporate
information
The consolidated financial
statements of Greatland Gold plc and its subsidiaries
(collectively, the Group) for the year ended 30 June 2024 were
authorised for issue in accordance with a resolution of the
Directors on 18 November
2024.
Greatland Gold plc is a public
limited company incorporated and domiciled in England and Wales.
The Company's ordinary shares are traded
on LSE AIM (AIM:GGP).
2 Basis
of preparation
The consolidated financial
statements of Greatland Gold plc (Greatland or the Group) have been prepared in
accordance with UK-adopted international accounting standards and
in accordance with the requirements of the Companies Act
2006.
The financial statements have been
prepared on the historical cost basis, except for certain financial
instruments and cash-settled share-based payments which have been
measured at fair value.
Going Concern
Greatland's principal activities
include the development of Havieron. At 30
June 2024 the Group had net current assets of £1.8 million (2023: £35.4 million),
with cash of £4.8 million (2023: £31.1 million) and advanced Havieron joint
venture cash contributions of £1.5 million (2023: £12.6
million).
After the conclusion of the
financial year, on 10 September 2024 Greatland announced the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition and an associated fully underwritten
institutional placing to raise US$325
million (£248.6 million) and retail offer
to raise US$8.8 million (£6.7
million). On 30 September 2024, a
general meeting of shareholders approved the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition and the issue of shares under the Institutional
Placing, the Retail Offer, and to a subsidiary of Newmont
Corporation pursuant to the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition.
Greatland has a cash position of £245.5 million at 31 October
2024.
As part of the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition on 10 September 2024 Greatland Pty Ltd signed a
non-legally binding Letter of Support from its banking syndicate
comprising of the Australian and New Zealand Banking Group Limited,
HSBC Bank and ING Bank (Australia) (together, the Banking Syndicate). The Letter of
Support provides that the Banking Syndicate are fully supportive
and interested in the provision of a A$775 million (£406 million)
facility which includes a working capital facility of A$100 million
(£52 million), for the funding of Havieron. In addition, a
commitment letter from the Banking Syndicate was signed on 10
September 2024 for a facility of A$100 million (£52 million)
including a working capital facility of A$75 million (£39
million).
In addition, Greatland had in
place a A$50 million (£26.0 million) standby loan facility with
Wyloo undrawn at year end. Post year end A$7 million (£3.6 million)
was drawn down and then subsequently repaid from the proceeds of
the equity placing noted above, and the facility
terminated.
Management has prepared
cash flow forecasts for the next
twelve months under various scenarios.
These scenarios anticipate the Group
will be able to meet its commitments
and pay its debts as and when they
fall due.
If required, the Group has a
number of options available to manage liquidity
including:
§ significantly reduce expenditure on its own exploration
programmes;
§ significantly reduce corporate costs;
§ raising additional funding through debt and equity, or a
combination of both, which the Company considers it has the ability
to do so, should it be required and has demonstrated an ability to
do so in the past.
Should the directors not achieve
the matters set out above, there is significant uncertainty whether
the Company will continue as a going concern and therefore whether
they will realise its assets and extinguish its liabilities in the
normal course of business and at the amounts stated in the
financial report.
Greatland has considered
sensitivities which include increases to the Havieron development
costs. In this situation, the Company can mitigate expenditure
including ceasing exploration activities and reducing corporate
costs. Having prepared forecasts based on current resources and
assessing methods of obtaining additional finance, the Directors
believe the Group has sufficient resources to meet its obligations
for a period of twelve months from the date of approval of these
financial statements. Taking these matters into consideration, the
Directors continue to adopt the going concern basis of accounting
in the preparation of the financial statements.
Rounding
The amounts presented in this
financial report have been rounded to the nearest £1,000 where
noted (£'000) under the option available to the Company under the
Companies Act 2006.
Significant accounting judgements, estimates and
assumptions
The preparation of financial
statements requires management to use estimates, judgements and
assumptions. Application of different assumptions and estimates may
have a significant impact on Greatland's net assets and financial
results. Estimates and assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis
and are based on the latest available information at each reporting
date.
This note provides an overview of
the areas that involved a higher degree of judgement and
complexity, or areas where assumptions are significant to the
financial statements. Detailed information about each of these
estimates and judgements is included in other notes together with
information about the basis of calculation for each affected line
item in the financial statements.
Description
|
Key
estimate or judgement
|
Notes
|
Mine development
|
The recoverable amount of mine
development is dependent on the successful development and
commercial exploration, or alternatively, sale of the respective
area of interest.
|
Note 17
|
Provisions
|
Rehabilitation, restoration and
dismantling provisions are reassessed at the end of each reporting
period. The estimated costs include judgement regarding the Group's
expectation of the level of rehabilitation activities that will be
undertaken, timing of cash flows, technological changes, regulatory
obligations, cost inflation and discount rates.
|
Note 25
|
Share-based payment
expense
|
The Group measures the cost of
share-based payment expenses with employees by reference to the
fair value of the equity instruments at the date at which they are
granted. The fair value was determined using a Monte Carlos and
Black-Scholes model which includes key assumptions.
|
Note 24
|
Going concern
|
The ability of the Company to
continue as a going concern depends upon continued access to
sufficient capital. Judgement is required in the estimation of
future cash flows.
|
Note 2
|
Loan due from subsidiary and
investment in subsidiary
|
The parent entity holds a loan due
from a 100% owned subsidiary. The recoverable amount of the loan is
dependent on the successful development and commercial
exploration, or alternatively, sale of the
respective area of interest.
|
Note 11 and 21
|
Basis of consolidation
The consolidated financial
statements comprise of the financial statements of Greatland Gold
plc and its subsidiaries it controls (as outlined in note 21).
Accounting for interests in joint arrangements is included in note
22.
Subsidiaries are those entities
controlled directly or indirectly by the Company. The Group
controls an entity when it is exposed to, or has rights to,
variable returns from its involvement with the entity and has the
ability to affect those returns through its power over the entity.
The results of the subsidiaries are included in the Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income from the date of acquisition
using the same accounting policies as those of the
Group.
The consideration transferred in a
business combination is the fair value at the acquisition date of
the assets transferred and the liabilities incurred by the Group
and includes the fair value of any contingent consideration
arrangement. Acquisition-related costs are recognised in the income
statement as incurred. Identifiable assets acquired and liabilities
and contingent liabilities assumed in a business combination are
measured initially at their fair value at the acquisition
date.
All intra-group balances and
transactions, including any unrealised income and expenses arising
from intragroup transactions, are eliminated in full in preparing
the consolidated financial statements. Unrealised gains arising
from transactions with equity accounted investees are eliminated
against the investment to the extent of the Group's interest in the
investee. Unrealised losses are eliminated in the same way as
unrealised gains, but only to the extent that there is no evidence
of impairment.
Foreign currencies
Both the functional and
presentational currency of Greatland Gold plc is sterling (£). Each
entity in the Group determines its own functional currency, the
primary economic environment in which the entity operates, and
items included in the financial statements of each entity are
measured using that functional currency.
Transactions in foreign currencies
are recorded at the spot rate at the date of the transaction.
Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies
are translated at the rate of exchange ruling at the balance sheet
date. All differences are taken to the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
On consolidation of a foreign
operation, assets and liabilities are translated at the balance
sheet rate, income and expenses are translated at average foreign
currency rates prevailing for the relevant period. Gains/losses
arising on translation of foreign controlled entities into pounds
sterling are taken to the foreign currency translation
reserve.
Other accounting policies
Significant and other accounting
policies that summarise the measurement basis used and are relevant
in understanding the financial statements are provided throughout
the notes to the financial statements.
2 Basis
of preparation (continued)
New standards, amendments and interpretations adopted by the
Group
The group has applied the
following standards and amendments for the first time for their
annual reporting period commencing 1 July 2023:
§ Amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements:
Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-current
§ Amendments to IAS 1: Presentation of Financial Statements and
IFRS Practice Statement 2: Disclosure of Accounting
Policies
§ Amendments to IAS 8: Accounting policies, Changes in
Accounting Estimates and Errors - Definition of Accounting
Estimates
§ Amendments to IAS 12: Income Taxes - Deferred Tax related to
Assets and Liabilities arising from a Single Transaction -
effective 1 January 2023
The amendments listed above did
not have any impact on the amounts recognised in prior periods and
are not expected to significantly affect the current or future
periods.
New and amended Standards and Interpretations issued but not
effective
At the date of approval of these
financial statements, the following standards and interpretations
which have not been applied in these financial statements were in
issue but not yet effective (and in some cases had not been adopted
by the UK):
§ IFRS
S1: General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability-related
Financial Information - effective 1 January 2024
§ IFRS
S2: Climate-related Disclosures - effective 1 January
2024
§ Amendments to IAS 1: Classification of Liabilities as Current
or Non-Current - effective 1 January 2024
§ Amendments to IFRS 16: Lease Liability in a Sale and
Leaseback - effective 1 January 2024
§ Amendments to IAS 1: Non-current Liabilities with Covenants -
effective 1 January 2024
§ Amendments to IAS 7 and IFRS 7: Supplier Finance Arrangements
- effective 1 January 2024
The new and amended Standards and
Interpretations which are in issue but not yet mandatorily
effective are not expected to be material.
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
3
Segmental information
Operating segments are reported in
a manner that is consistent with the internal reporting to the
Board and the executive management team (the chief operating
decision makers). Greatland operates one segment being Exploration
and Evaluation of Minerals and Mine Development in
Australia.
4
Employee information
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Wages and
salaries
|
3,492
|
3,352
|
769
|
501
|
Bonus
|
919
|
863
|
-
|
-
|
Pension /
superannuation
|
287
|
349
|
37
|
24
|
Share-based payments
|
3,280
|
9,787
|
65
|
8,687
|
Total director and employee benefit
expense
|
7,978
|
14,351
|
871
|
9,212
|
|
Average
Number
|
Average
Number
|
Average
Number
|
Average
Number
|
Exploration
|
12
|
11
|
-
|
-
|
Corporate and other
|
20
|
14
|
7
|
4
|
For further details on Director's
remuneration refer to Remuneration Report.
4
Employee information (continued)
Recognition and measurement
Employee benefits
Wages, salaries and defined
contribution superannuation expenses are recognised as and when
employees render their services. Expenses for non-accumulating
personal leave are recognised when the leave is taken and measured
at the rates paid or payable.
Share-based payments
The accounting policy, key
estimates and judgements relating to employee share-based payments
are set out in note 24.
5
Administrative Expenses
|
Note
|
2024
|
2023
£'000
|
Administrative Expenses
|
|
|
|
Employee benefits
|
|
3,644
|
2,981
|
Havieron-Telfer acquisition
costs
|
|
1,517
|
-
|
Other administrative
costs
|
|
2,039
|
2,742
|
Total finance income
|
|
7,200
|
5,723
|
Recognition and measurement
Administrative expenses are
recognised on an accrual basis.
6
Finance income and finance costs
|
Note
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Finance income
|
|
|
|
Interest income
|
|
821
|
1,228
|
Total finance income
|
|
821
|
1,228
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
|
Interest on lease
liabilities
|
|
(13)
|
(7)
|
Unwinding of discount on
provisions
|
25
|
(25)
|
(91)
|
Other
|
|
(3)
|
(4)
|
Finance facility fees
|
|
(684)
|
-
|
Total finance costs
|
|
(725)
|
(102)
|
Recognition and measurement
Interest income is recognised as
interest accrues using the effective interest method.
Provisions and other payables are
discounted to their present value when the effect of the time value
of money is significant. The impact of the unwinding of these
discounts is reported in finance costs.
Borrowing costs
General and specific borrowing
costs that are directly attributable to the acquisition,
construction or production of a qualifying asset are capitalised
during the period that is required to complete and prepare the
asset for its intended use or sale. Qualifying assets are assets
that necessarily take a substantial period of time to get ready for
their intended use or sale.
All other borrowing costs are
recognised in income in the period in which they are
incurred.
7
Taxation
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Components of income tax:
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax - temporary differences
|
|
-
|
-
|
Current tax
|
|
-
|
-
|
Income tax expense
|
|
-
|
-
|
There was no deferred or current
tax during the year or in prior year.
Factors affecting tax charge for the year
The tax assessed on the loss on
ordinary activities for the period differs from the standard rate
of corporation tax in the UK of 19% (2023:
19%) and Australia of 30% (2023: 30%). The differences are
explained below:
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Loss before income tax
|
|
(14,870)
|
(21,120)
|
Weighted average applicate rate of
tax of 28% (2023: 24%)
|
(4,231)
|
(5,052)
|
Increase (decrease) in income tax due to:
|
|
|
|
Share-based payments
|
|
977
|
1,981
|
Unwind of rehabilitation
provision
|
|
10
|
30
|
Temporary differences
|
|
(4,125)
|
(1,730)
|
Net deferred tax assets not
brought to account
|
|
7,369
|
4,771
|
Income tax expense
|
|
-
|
-
|
Tax losses
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Unused tax losses for which no
deferred tax asset has been recognised
|
|
84,616
|
57,967
|
Potential tax benefit - average effective tax rate of
28%
|
|
23,761
|
16,063
|
The Group has unrecognised carried
forward losses for which no deferred tax asset is recognised as the
statutory requirements for recognising those deferred tax assets
have not yet been met. The Group recognises the benefit of tax
losses only to the extent of anticipated future taxable income or
gains in relevant jurisdictions. These losses do not expire.
Unrecognised UK revenue losses for which no deferred tax asset has
been recognised are £14.8 million (2023: £11.3 million).
Unrecognised Australian revenue losses for which no deferred tax
asset has been recognised are approximately £69.9 million (A$134.2
million) (2023: £46.4 million).
Recognition and measurement
Current tax assets and liabilities
for the period are measured at the amount expected to be recovered
from or paid to the taxation authorities. The tax rates and tax
laws used to compute the amount are those that are enacted or
substantially enacted by the reporting date in the countries where
the Group operates.
Full provision is made for
deferred taxation resulting from timing differences which have
arisen but not reversed at the reporting date.
Deferred tax is calculated at the
tax rates that are expected to apply in the period when the
liability is settled or the asset realised. Deferred tax is charged
or credited to profit or loss, except when it relates to items
charged or credited directly to equity, in which case the deferred
tax is also dealt with in equity.
The Group offsets deferred tax
assets and deferred tax liabilities if, and only if, it has a
legally enforceable right to set off current tax assets and current
tax liabilities and the deferred tax assets and deferred tax
liabilities relate to income taxes levied by the same taxation
authority on either the same taxable entity or different taxable
entities which intend either to settle current tax liabilities and
assets on a net basis, or to realise the assets and settle the
liabilities simultaneously, in each future period in which
significant amounts of deferred tax liabilities or assets are
expected to be settled or recovered.
Deferred tax assets on carried
forward losses are only recorded where it is expected that future
trading profits will be generated in which this asset can be
offset. The carrying amount of deferred tax assets is reviewed at
each reporting date and reduced to the extent that it is no longer
probable that sufficient taxable profits will be available to allow
all or part of the asset to be recovered.
Tax consolidation
Greatland Holdings Group Pty Ltd,
a 100% owned subsidiary of Greatland Gold plc, and its 100% owned
Australian resident subsidiaries formed a tax consolidated group
with effect from 14 February 2023. Greatland Holdings Group Pty Ltd
is the head entity of the tax consolidated group. Members of the
tax consolidated group have entered into a tax funding agreement
under which the wholly-owned entities fully compensate Greatland
Holdings Group Pty Ltd for any current tax payable assumed and are
compensated by Greatland Holdings Group Pty Ltd for any current tax
receivable and deferred tax assets related to unused tax losses or
unused tax credits that are transferred to Greatland Holdings Group
Pty Ltd under the tax consolidation.
8
Earnings per Share
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Loss for the
year
|
|
(14,870)
|
(21,120)
|
Weighted average number of
ordinary shares of £0.001 in issue
|
|
5,084,605,107
|
4,849,928,345
|
Basic earnings per share
(pence)
|
|
(0.29)
|
(0.44)
|
The weighted average number of the
Group's shares including outstanding options is 5,164,700,562
(2023: 4,921,573,345). Dilutive earnings per share are not included
on the basis inclusion of potential ordinary shares would result in
a decrease in basic earnings per share and is considered
anti-dilutive.
Recognition and measurement
Basic earnings per share
Basic earnings per share is
calculated by dividing:
§ the
profit attributable to owners of the company, excluding any costs
of servicing equity other than ordinary shares; and
§ by the
weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the
financial year, adjusted for any bonus elements in the ordinary
shares issued during the year and excluding treasury
shares.
Diluted earnings per share
Diluted earnings per share adjusts
the figures used in the determination of basic earnings per share
to consider:
§ the
after-income tax effect of interest and other financing costs
associated with dilutive potential ordinary shares; and
§ the
weighted average number of additional ordinary shares that would
have been outstanding assuming the conversion of all dilutive
potential ordinary shares.
CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
9 Cash
and cash equivalents
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Cash at bank
|
4,703
|
25,794
|
519
|
489
|
Short-term deposits
|
105
|
5,355
|
-
|
-
|
Total cash and cash equivalents
|
4,808
|
31,149
|
519
|
489
|
Recognition and measurement
Cash and cash equivalents in the
consolidated statement of financial position and consolidated
statement of cash flows comprise cash at bank and short-term
deposits that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash with
insignificant risk of change in value. Short-term deposits are
usually between one to three months depending on the short-term
cash flow requirements of the Group. The Group holds short-term
deposits with financial institutions that have a long term credit
rating of AA- or above.
10 Advanced
joint venture cash contributions
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Havieron joint venture cash calls
in advance
|
1,510
|
12,576
|
-
|
-
|
Total advanced joint venture cash
contributions
|
1,510
|
12,576
|
-
|
-
|
Recognition and measurement
Joint venture cash calls are paid
in advance of expenditure being incurred. Once the funds have been
incurred, they are transferred out of current assets and into the
relevant asset or expenditure depending on the nature of the
transaction.
11 Trade and
other receivables
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
GST receivable
|
29
|
116
|
-
|
-
|
Loans due from
subsidiaries
|
-
|
-
|
3,382
|
92,721
|
Other receivables
|
108
|
|
-
|
|
Total trade and other receivables
|
137
|
116
|
3,382
|
92,721
|
Recognition and measurement
Trade and other receivables are
recognised initially at fair value and subsequently measured at
amortised cost using the effective interest method, less any
allowance for the expected future issue of credit notes and for
non-recoverability due to credit risk. The Group applies the
simplified approach to measuring expected credit losses which uses
a lifetime expected loss allowance for all trade receivables and
contract assets. To measure expected credit losses, trade
receivables and contract assets have been grouped based on shared
risk characteristics. No such credit loss has been recorded in
these financial statements as any effect would be
immaterial.
Key estimates and
assumptions - Impairment on loan due from
subsidiary
The Company holds loans due from its 100% owned subsidiaries.
The recoverable amount of the loan is dependent on the successful
development and commercial exploration of Havieron, or
alternatively, sale of the respective area of interest. Management
has concluded the loans will be recoverable on this
basis.
|
12 Trade and
other payables
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Trade and other
payables
|
624
|
1,492
|
84
|
197
|
Payroll tax and other statutory
liabilities
|
171
|
192
|
-
|
-
|
Juri joint venture funds received
in advance
|
-
|
28
|
-
|
-
|
Accruals1
|
4,399
|
6,799
|
84
|
-
|
Total trade and other payables
|
5,197
|
8,511
|
168
|
197
|
1Accruals are primarily
related to accrued interest on the Newcrest Operations Limited loan
balance of £1.4 million (2023:£1.4 million), accrued capital
expenditure related to the Havieron Joint Venture £1.4 million
(2023:£4.2 million) and accrued operating expenditure £1.6 million
(2023:£1.2 million).
Recognition and measurement
Trade and other payables
Trade payables and other payables
are carried at amortised cost and represent liabilities for goods
and services provided to the Group prior to the end of the
financial year that are unpaid and arise when the Group becomes
obliged to make future payments in respect of the purchase of these
goods and services. The amounts are unsecured and are usually paid
within 30 days of recognition.
Employee benefits
Short term employee benefits are
liabilities for wages and salaries, including non-monetary
benefits, annual leave and accumulating sick leave that are
expected to be settled wholly within 12 months after the end of the
period in which the employees render the related service are
recognised in respect of employees' services up to the end of the
reporting period and are measured at the amounts expected to be
paid when the liabilities are settled. The liabilities are
presented as current other payables and accruals in the statement
of financial position.
13
Borrowings
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Opening balance
|
41,503
|
43,103
|
-
|
-
|
Capitalised interest
|
-
|
45
|
-
|
-
|
Effect of foreign exchange
revaluation
|
38
|
1,661
|
-
|
-
|
Adjustment of currency
translation
|
(48)
|
(3,306)
|
-
|
-
|
Total non-current borrowings
|
41,493
|
41,503
|
-
|
-
|
The borrowings presented above
relate to a loan agreement with Newcrest Operations Limited, a
wholly owned subsidiary of Newmont Corporation, dated 29 November
2020 in respect of Havieron. As at 30 June 2024, the loan was fully
drawn down. The key terms of the facility with Newcrest
include:
§ The loan is made up of Facility A and Facility B with values
of US$20 million and US$30 million respectively, in addition to
capitalised interest;
§ Interest is calculated on the LIBOR rate plus a margin of 8%
annually and is calculated every 90 days. Following the removal of
LIBOR this was subsequently updated to SOFR plus a margin of
8.26161%;
§ The facility is secured against Greatland's share of the
Havieron asset;
§ Repayment of the loan is from 80% of net proceeds from the
sale of Havieron products and must be repaid by the earlier of 10
years from the date of the Feasibility Study or 12 years from the
date of the Newcrest Loan Agreement;
§ There are no financial covenants.
Unrealised foreign exchange loss
of £0.1 million (2023: £1.7 million) was incurred on the
US$52.4 million loan balance held by the
Australian subsidiary. The functional currency of the Australian
subsidiary is Australian dollars while the loan is denominated in
US dollars. The exchange rate decreased during the year from 0.6630
USD/AUD at 30 June 2023 to 0.6624 USD/AUD at 30 June
2024.
Exchange differences arising on
the translation of the functional currency of the Australian
subsidiary differing from the Group's presentation currency
resulted in a reduction to borrowings of £0.1 million during the
year (2023: reduction of £3.3 million). The exchange rate decreased
during the year from 0.5250 GBP/AUD at 30 June 2023 to 0.5244
GBP/AUD at 30 June 2024.
At 30 June 2024,
Greatland has access to a A$50 million (£26.0
million) standby loan facility with Wyloo undrawn at year end.
Refer to note 28 for details of the extinguishment of the facility
post year end.
Details of the Group's exposure to
risks and the maturity of the loan are set out in note 15.
13 Borrowings
(continued)
Recognition and measurement
At initial recognition, financial
liabilities are classified as financial liabilities at fair value
through profit or loss, amortised cost, or as derivatives
designated as hedging instruments in an effective hedge, as
appropriate. All financial liabilities are recognised initially at
fair value and, in the case of those measured at amortised cost,
net of directly attributable transaction costs. The subsequent
measurement of financial liabilities depends on their
classification, as described below.
Financial liabilities measured at amortised
cost
Borrowings are measured at
amortised cost using the effective interest method. Gains and
losses are recognised in profit or loss when the liabilities are
derecognised as well as through the effective interest method
amortisation process.
Amortised cost is calculated by
considering any discount or premium on acquisition and fees or
costs that are an integral part of the effective interest. Refer
to note 17 for interest capitalised to
mine development.
14
Equity
|
Note
|
No. of
Shares
|
Share Capital
£'000
|
Share Premium
£'000
|
Merger
Reserve
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Balance at 1 July 2023 of authorised fully paid
shares
|
|
5,068,626,282
|
5,069
|
70,821
|
27,494
|
103,384
|
Issued at £0.025 - exercise of
options on 24 September 2023
|
|
1,500,000
|
2
|
36
|
-
|
38
|
Issued at £0.030 - exercise of
options on 24 September 2023
|
|
1,250,000
|
1
|
36
|
-
|
37
|
Issued at £0.003 - exercise of
options on 1 October 2023
|
|
14,000,000
|
13
|
24
|
-
|
37
|
Issued at £0.014 - exercise of
options on 1 October 2023
|
|
2,500,000
|
3
|
33
|
-
|
36
|
Issued at £0.020 - exercise of
options on 1 October 2023
|
|
2,500,000
|
3
|
48
|
-
|
51
|
Balance at 30 June 2024 of authorised fully paid
shares
|
|
5,090,376,282
|
5,091
|
70,998
|
27,494
|
103,583
|
|
Note
|
No. of
Shares
|
Share Capital
£'000
|
Share Premium
£'000
|
Merger
Reserve
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Balance at 1 July 2022 of
authorised fully paid shares
|
|
4,070,547,171
|
4,071
|
36,166
|
225
|
40,462
|
Issued at £0.001 - Havieron
contingent consideration on 2 Aug 2022
|
(a)
|
138,981,150
|
138
|
-
|
-
|
138
|
Issued at £0.082 - from equity
raise on 25 Aug 2022
|
(b)
|
362,880,180
|
362
|
-
|
29,393
|
29,755
|
Issued at £0.078 - from Wyloo
subscription on 7 Oct 2022
|
(c)
|
430,024,390
|
430
|
33,104
|
-
|
33,534
|
Issued at £0.0765 - Havieron 5%
option fee to advisor on 11 Nov 2022
|
|
13,443,391
|
13
|
1,015
|
-
|
1,028
|
Issued at £0.020 - exercise of
options on 9 January 2023
|
|
25,000,000
|
25
|
25
|
-
|
50
|
Issued at £0.025 - exercise of
options on 9 January 2023
|
|
8,750,000
|
9
|
210
|
-
|
219
|
Issued at £0.070 - exercise of
options on 9 January 2023
|
|
7,500,000
|
8
|
45
|
-
|
53
|
Issued at £0.025 - exercise of
options on 30 January 2023
|
|
5,000,000
|
5
|
120
|
-
|
125
|
Issued at £0.03 - exercise of
options on 30 January 2023
|
|
3,000,000
|
3
|
87
|
-
|
90
|
Issued at £0.001 - exercise of
options on 13 February 2023
|
|
500,000
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
Issued at £0.025 - exercise of
options on 9 March 2023
|
|
1,500,000
|
2
|
36
|
-
|
38
|
Issued at £0.03 - exercise of
options on 9 March 2023
|
|
1,500,000
|
2
|
43
|
-
|
45
|
Less: transaction costs on share
issue
|
|
-
|
-
|
(30)
|
(2,124)
|
(2,154)
|
Balance at 30 June 2023 of authorised fully paid
shares
|
|
5,068,626,282
|
5,069
|
70,821
|
27,494
|
103,384
|
(a) Contingent deferred acquisition
consideration
In July 2022 (prior to the outcome
of the Havieron 5% option process), Greatland successfully
renegotiated the deferred consideration that was due to be paid in
respect of its 2016 acquisition of Havieron. The original terms of
the acquisition comprised an initial payment of A$25,000 in cash
and 65,490,000 new ordinary shares. A further 145,530,000 new
ordinary shares were payable if Greatland's ownership interest in
Havieron reduced to 25% or less, or upon a decision to mine at
Havieron whichever occurs earlier.
The 145,530,000 deferred share
payment was renegotiated as follows:
i) 138,981,150
Greatland shares were issued to the vendor nominee, Five Diggers,
during the year. This represented a 4.5% reduction in total shares
issued relative to the ordinary agreed quantum
ii) In respect of the
138,981,150 shares issued, Five Diggers are subject to the
following restrictions:
§ A lock up
which prohibits any shares from being disposed of for the first 12
months from grant, subject to carveouts (such as recommend
takeovers), and
§ Orderly
market arrangement, under which the shares may only be traded
through Greatland's broker (subject to customary carve
outs)
The new ordinary shares were issued
in Greatland on 2 August 2022. The fair value of the contingent
consideration formed part of the original acquisition in 2016 and
as such the equity instruments were issued to share capital for
£0.001 as required by the Companies Act 2006, with nil value
attributable to share premium in August 2022.
(b) August 2022 equity raise
On 25 August 2022, Greatland raised
total gross proceeds of £29.8 million through placing 362,880,180
new ordinary shares at an issue price of £0.082. The raise was
facilitated through an incorporated Jersey registered company,
Ferdinand (Jersey) Limited. The proceeds of the share issue were
held in trust by Greatland on behalf of Ferdinand (Jersey) Limited,
which was then acquired by way of share for share exchange in
circumstances which qualified for merger relief, therefore no
amount was recognised as share premium on the share issue as
required under section 612 of the Companies Act.
The amount recognised in the merger
reserve reflects the amount by which the fair value of the shares
issued exceeded their nominal value and is recorded within the
merger reserve on consolidation, rather than in a share premium
account.
(c) Strategic placement to Wyloo
On 12 September 2022, Greatland
entered into an agreement for a strategic equity investment with
Wyloo, a privately owned minerals investment company. Wyloo
subscribed for 430,024,390 shares for A$60 million (£33.5 million),
an equivalent at the date of the agreement of £0.082 per share.
This placement occurred at the same price as the August 2022 raise
which equated to a small premium to the five-day VWAP of 9
September 2022. The transaction was approved by shareholders on 7
October 2022, resulting in Wyloo becoming Greatland's largest
shareholder with approximately 8.6% of shares on issue. Settlement
occurred on 14 October 2022 at a converted share price of £0.078
per share. On settlement, the A$60 million (£33.5 million)
consideration received from Wyloo was allocated to share capital
and share premium reflecting the fair value of the ordinary shares
at settlement date.
As part of the equity subscription,
a further £35 million may be raised from Wyloo in the future
through the conversion of 352,620,000 warrants with a strike price
of £0.10 per share and expiry date of 6 October 2025. The warrants
were recognised in the statement of financial position at nil value
on issue.
(d) Farm-in to Rio Tinto Exploration's Paterson
South
In May 2023, Greatland entered into
a farm-in and joint venture agreement with Rio Tinto in respect of
the Paterson South Project which comprises of nine exploration
licences. Under the farm-in and joint venture arrangement,
Greatland is required to make a payment to RTX of A$350,000 which
Greatland has elected to settle in shares. TAt the time of this
report the shares are yet to be issued. As the farm-in and joint
venture agreement was executed during the prior year, the up-front
payment was capitalised as part of the acquisition costs of the
tenements and recognised in share-based payment reserves until the
shares are issued.
Capital management
Greatland's capital includes
shareholders' equity, reserves and net debt. Net debt is defined as
borrowings and lease liabilities less cash and cash
equivalent.
Management controls the capital of
the Group to generate long-term shareholder value and ensure that
the Group can fund operations and continue as a going concern.
Management effectively manages the Group's capital by assessing the
Group's financial risks and adjusting its capital structure in
response to changes in these risks and in the market. These
responses include share issues and debt considerations. Given the
nature of the Group's current activities, the entity will remain
dependent on debt and equity funding in the short to medium term
until such time as the Group becomes self-financing from the
commercial production of mineral resources.
Recognition and measurement
Share capital and share premium
Share capital is the nominal value
of shares issued at £0.001.
Share premium is the amount
subscribed for share capital in excess of nominal value, less share
issue cost.
Ordinary shares participate in
dividends and the proceeds on winding up the Company in proportion
to the number of shares held. At shareholder meetings each ordinary
share is entitled to one vote when a poll is called, otherwise each
shareholder has one vote on a show of hands.
14 Equity
(continued)
Merger reserve
Where the Company issues equity
shares in consideration for securing a holding of at least 90% of
the nominal value of each class of equity in another company, the
application of merger relief is compulsory. Merger relief is a
statutory relief from recognising any share premium on shares
issued. A merger reserve is recorded equal to the value of share
premium which would have been recorded if the provisions of section
612 of the Companies Act 2006 had not been applicable.
15
Financial risk
management
This note explains the Group's
material exposure to financial risks and how these risks could
affect the Group's future financial performance.
Financial Risks
|
Exposure arising from
|
Measurement
|
Management
|
Market risk - foreign
exchange
|
Recognised financial assets and
liabilities not denominated in GBP
|
§ Cash
flow forecasting
§ Sensitivity analysis
|
Assessment of use of financial
instruments, hedging contracts or techniques to mitigate
risk
|
Market risk - interest
rate
|
Long-term borrowings at variable
rates
|
§ Cash
flow forecasting
§ Sensitivity analysis
|
Assessment of use of financial
instruments, hedging contracts or techniques to mitigate
risk
|
Credit risk
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
§ Credit
ratings
|
Diversification of banks, credit
limits, investment grade credit ratings
|
Liquidity risk
|
Borrowings and other
liabilities
|
§ Rolling
cash flow forecasts
|
Availability of committed credit
lines and borrowing facilities, equity raises
|
There have been no changes in
financial risks from the previous year. The Group did not have any
hedging in place at 30 June 2024 or in prior year. Details on
commodity price risk is included in the Principal Risks and
Uncertainties section above.
Market Risk
(a) Foreign currency risk and sensitivity
analysis
The Group's exposure to foreign
currency risk at the end of the reporting period was as
follows:
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
USD $'000
|
AUD
$'000
|
USD $'000
|
AUD
$'000
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
-
|
8,179
|
-
|
58,400
|
Borrowings
|
(52,412)
|
-
|
(52,412)
|
-
|
The following table demonstrates
the sensitivity of the exposure at the balance sheet date to a
reasonably possible change in AUD/USD/GBP exchange rate, with all
other variables held constant. The impact on the Group's profit
before tax and equity is due to changes in the fair value of
monetary assets and liabilities, expressed in GBP.
Effect on profit before tax
|
|
|
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
USD/GBP exchange rate - increase
4% (2023: 4%)
|
|
(1,660)
|
(1,660)
|
USD/GBP exchange rate - decrease
4% (2023: 4%)
|
|
1,660
|
1,660
|
AUD/GBP exchange rate - increase
6% (2023: 10%)
|
|
257
|
3,066
|
AUD/GBP exchange rate - decrease
6% (2023: 10%)
|
|
(257)
|
(3,066)
|
(b) Interest rate risk management and sensitivity
analysis
The Group's policy is to retain its
surplus funds in interest bearing deposit accounts including term
deposits available up to twelve months' maximum duration. An
increase / decrease of 2% in interest rates will impact the Group's
income statement by a gain/loss of £0.3 million (2023: £1.2
million). The Group considers that a +/-2% movement in interest
rates represents reasonable possible changes.
The Group has borrowing facilities
with Newmont as part of the Havieron project with a total facility
limit of US$50 million, excluding interest. Interest is calculated
on the SOFR plus a margin of 8.26161% pa. Interest is calculated
every 90 days. Under the Group's accounting policy, interest on the
loan is capitalised to mine development and therefore movements in
interest rates had no impact on the profit or loss in the current
year.
Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk that a
counterparty will not meet its obligations under a financial
instrument or customer contract, leading to a financial loss. The
Group is exposed to credit risk from its financing activities,
including deposits with financial institutions. At the reporting date, the carrying amount of the Group's
financial assets represents the maximum credit exposure.
The credit risk on cash and cash
equivalents is managed by restricting dealing and holding of funds
to banks which are assigned high credit ratings by international
credit rating agencies. The Group's cash
and cash equivalents as at 30 June 2024 are predominately held with
financial institutions with an investment grade long term credit
rating with Standard & Poor's. As short-term deposits have
maturity dates of less than twelve months,
the Group has assessed the credit risk on these financial assets
using life time expected credit losses. In this regard, the Group
has concluded that the probability of default on the term deposits
is relatively low. Accordingly, no impairment allowance has been
recognised for expected credit losses on the short-term
deposits.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that the
Group will encounter difficulty in meeting obligations associated
with financial liabilities that are settled by delivering cash or
another financial asset. The Group's
approach to managing liquidity is to ensure, as far as possible,
that it will always have sufficient liquidity to meet its
liabilities when due, under both normal and stressed conditions,
without incurring unacceptable losses or risking damage to the
Group's reputation. The Group manages liquidity risk by conducting
regular reviews of the timing of cash flows to ensure sufficient
funds are available to meet these obligations.
(a) Maturities of financial liabilities
The table below analyses the
Group's financial liabilities into relevant maturity groupings
based on their contractual maturities. The amounts disclosed in the
table are contractual discounted cash flows. Balances due within 12
months equal their carrying balances as the impact of discounting
is not significant.
Contractual maturities of financial
liabilities
At 30 June 2024
|
Less than 6
months
£'000
|
6- 12
months
£'000
|
Between 1 and 2
years
£'000
|
Between 2 and 5
years
£'000
|
Over 5
years
£'000
|
Total contractual
cashflows
£'000
|
Carrying
amount
£'000
|
Trade payables
|
5,193
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5,193
|
5,193
|
Borrowings
|
-
|
-
|
41,493
|
-
|
-
|
41,493
|
41,493
|
Lease liabilities
|
74
|
75
|
125
|
51
|
-
|
325
|
309
|
Total liabilities
|
5,267
|
75
|
41,618
|
51
|
-
|
47,011
|
46,995
|
Contractual maturities of financial
liabilities
At 30 June 2023
|
Less than 6
months
£'000
|
6- 12
months
£'000
|
Between 1 and 2
years
£'000
|
Between 2 and 5
years
£'000
|
Over 5
years
£'000
|
Total contractual
cashflows
£'000
|
Carrying
amount
£'000
|
Trade payables
|
8,511
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
8,511
|
8,511
|
Borrowings
|
-
|
-
|
41,503
|
-
|
-
|
41,503
|
41,503
|
Lease liabilities
|
75
|
76
|
129
|
155
|
-
|
435
|
412
|
Total liabilities
|
8,586
|
76
|
41,632
|
155
|
-
|
50,449
|
50,426
|
INVESTED CAPITAL
16 Exploration
and evaluation assets
|
Note
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
As at 1 July
|
|
264
|
94
|
Additions
|
(a)
|
-
|
189
|
Disposals
|
|
(27)
|
|
Adjustment of currency
translation
|
|
-
|
(19)
|
As at 30 June
|
|
237
|
264
|
(a) Farm-in to Rio Tinto Exploration's Paterson
South
Greatland entered into a farm-in
and joint venture agreement with RTX during the year in respect of
the Paterson South Project which comprises of nine exploration
licences. Greatland elected to settle the up-front payment to RTX
of A$350,000 in shares. Refer to note 14(d) for further
details.
Recognition and measurement
Exploration and evaluation and
development assets includes acquisition costs, costs associated
with exploring, investigating, examining and evaluating an area of
mineralisation, and assessing the technical feasibility and
commercial viability of extracting the mineral resource from that
area.
Exploration and evaluation
expenditure is capitalised and carried forward to the extent that
it relates to:
(i) acquisition costs;
or
(ii) costs are expected to be
recouped through successful development and exploitation of the
area of interest or alternatively through sale.
If the above criteria are not met,
exploration expenditure is expensed when incurred.
The recoverability of the
exploration and evaluation assets is dependent on the successful
development and commercial exploration, or alternatively, sale of
the respective area of interest. Exploration and evaluation assets
are assessed for impairment if one or more of the following facts
and circumstances exist:
§ the
right to explore the specific area has expired during the period or
will expire in the near future, and is not expected to be
renewed;
§ substantive expenditure on further exploration for and
evaluation of mineral resources is the specific areas is neither
budgeted nor planned;
§ exploration and evaluation of mineral resources in the
specific area have not led to the discovery of commercially viable
quantities of mineral resources and the company has decided to
discontinue such activities in the specific area;
§ sufficient data exists to indicate that, although development
in the specific area is likely to proceed, the carrying amount of
the exploration and evaluation asset is unlikely to be recovered in
full from successful development or by sale.
An exploration and evaluation
asset will be reclassified to mine development when the technical
feasibility and commercial viability of extracting a mineral
resource are demonstrable.
17 Mine
Development
|
|
Assets under
construction
£'000
|
Rehabilitation
asset £'000
|
Total
£'000
|
As at 1 July 2022
|
|
33,835
|
1,747
|
35,582
|
Additions
|
|
23,367
|
-
|
23,367
|
Capitalised interest
|
|
5,406
|
-
|
5,406
|
Adjustment of currency
translation
|
|
(4,294)
|
(130)
|
(4,424)
|
As at 30 June 2023
|
|
58,314
|
1,617
|
59,931
|
Additions
|
|
16,386
|
-
|
16,386
|
Capitalised interest
|
|
5,767
|
-
|
5,767
|
Adjustment of currency
translation
|
|
92
|
(2)
|
90
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
|
80,559
|
1,615
|
82,174
|
Recognition and measurement
Mine Development
Mine development represents
expenditure incurred when the technical feasibility and commercial
viability of extracting a mineral resource are demonstrable and
includes costs incurred up until such time as the asset is capable
of being operated in a manner intended by management.
Mine development is stated at
historical cost less impairment losses, if any. Historical cost
includes expenditure that is directly attributable to the
acquisition of the items and costs incurred in bringing the asset
into use.
Subsequent costs are included in
the asset's carrying amount or recognised as a separate asset, as
appropriate, only when it is probable that future economic benefits
associated with the item flow to the Group and the cost of the item
can be measured reliably. The carrying amount of the replaced part
is de-recognised. All other repairs and maintenance costs are
recognised in the income statement as incurred.
Depreciation does not commence
until the asset is in the location and condition necessary for it
to be capable of operating in the manner intended by
management.
An item of mine development is
derecognised upon disposal or when no future economic benefits are
expected from its use or disposal. Any gain or loss arising on
derecognition of the asset (calculated as the difference between
the net disposal proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset) is
included in the income statement when the asset is
derecognised.
Impairment
At each reporting date, the
Company assesses whether there are any indicators of impairment. If
any indicator exists, the Company estimates the asset's recoverable
amount. An asset's recoverable amount is the higher of an asset's
or cash generating unit's (CGU) fair value less cost of
disposal and its value in use. Recoverable amount is determined for
an individual asset, unless the asset does not generate cash
inflows that are largely independent of those from other assets or
groups of assets. When the carrying amount of an asset or CGU
exceeds its recoverable amount, the asset is considered impaired
and is written down to its recoverable amount.
The recoverable amount of mine
development is dependent on the Company's estimate of the Ore
Reserve that can be economically and legally extracted. The Company
estimates its Ore Reserve and Mineral Resource based on information
compiled by appropriately qualified persons relating to the
geological data on the size, depth and shape of the ore body, and
requires complex geological judgments to interpret the
data.
Impairment losses are recognised
in the profit or loss.
Capitalised borrowing costs
General and specific borrowing
costs that are directly attributable to the acquisition,
construction or production of a qualifying asset are capitalised
during the period of time that is required to complete and prepare
the asset for its intended use or sale. Qualifying assets are
assets that necessarily take a substantial period of time to get
ready for their intended use or sale.
17 Mine
Development (continued)
Key estimates and
assumptions - Mine Development
Development activities commence after commercial viability
and technical feasibility of the project is established. Judgement
is applied by management in determining when a project is
commercially viable and technically feasible. In exercising this
judgement, management is required to make certain estimates and
assumptions as to future events. If, after having commenced the
development activity, a judgement is made that a development asset
is impaired the relevant capitalised amount will be written off to
the income statement.
The Group's estimate of the Havieron Ore Reserve and Mineral
Resource is based on information compiled by appropriately
qualified persons relating to the geological data on the size,
depth and shape of the ore body, and requires complex geological
judgments to interpret the data. The estimation is based on factors
such as estimates of foreign exchange rates, commodity prices,
future capital requirements, and production costs along with
geological assumptions and judgments made in estimating the size
and grade of the ore body and removal of waste material. Management
have determined the mine development asset to be recoverable based
on the Havieron Reserve and Resource. Future changes in these
estimates may impact upon the carrying value of mine properties,
property, plant and equipment, and provision for rehabilitation. A
copy of the Havieron Reserve and Resource is available on the
company's website: https://greatlandgold.com
|
18
Leases
(a) Amounts recognised in the balance sheet
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Right-of-use asset
|
|
|
|
|
Office and other leases
|
312
|
418
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Current lease
liabilities
|
133
|
128
|
-
|
-
|
Non-current lease
liabilities
|
176
|
284
|
-
|
-
|
Total lease liabilities
|
309
|
412
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
Maturity analysis of undiscounted future lease
payments
|
|
|
|
|
Within one year
|
149
|
128
|
-
|
-
|
Later than one year but not later
than five years
|
176
|
307
|
-
|
-
|
Later than five years
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Total undiscounted future lease
payments
|
325
|
435
|
-
|
-
|
Additions to the right-of-use
assets during the year were £0.1 million (2023: £0.4 million)
associated with the extension to the office and warehouse
leases.
(b) Amounts recognised in the statement of comprehensive
income
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Depreciation charge of
right-of-use assets
|
133
|
197
|
-
|
13
|
Interest expense (included in
finance cost)
|
13
|
7
|
-
|
1
|
Expense relating to short-term
leases of low value (included in administrative expense)
|
13
|
6
|
-
|
-
|
(c) The group's leasing activities and how these are
accounted for
The Group leases various offices,
warehouses, equipment and vehicles. Rental contracts are typically
made for fixed periods of 6 months to 8 years. Payments associated
with short-term leases of equipment and vehicles and all leases of
low-value assets are recognised on a straight-line basis as an
expense in the statement of profit or loss. Short-term leases are
leases with a lease term of 12 months or less without a purchase
option. Low-value assets comprise IT equipment and office
furniture.
(d) Extension and termination options
Extension options are included in
the leases if it is reasonably certain the lease terms are to be
extended. These are used to maximise operational flexibility in
terms of managing the assets used in the group's
operations.
18 Leases
(continued)
Recognition and measurement
Assets and liabilities arising
from a lease are initially measured on present value basis.
Lease liabilities include the net present value of the
following lease payments:
§ fixed
payments (including in-substance fixed payments), less any lease
incentives receivable
§ variable lease payments that are based on an index or a rate,
initially measured using the index or rate as at the commencement
date
§ amounts
expected to be payable by the group is reasonably certain to
exercise that option, and
§ payments of penalties for terminating the lease, if the lease
term reflects the group exercising that option
The lease payments are discounted
using the interest rate implicit in the lease. If that rate cannot
be readily determined, which is generally the case for leases in
the group, the lessee's incremental borrowing rate is used, being
the rate that the individual lessee would have to pay to borrow the
funds necessary to obtain an asset of similar value to the
right-of-use asset in a similar economic environment with similar
terms, security and conditions.
The group is exposed to potential
future increases in variable lease payments based on an index or
rate, which are not included in the lease liability until they take
effect. When adjustments to lease payments based on an index or
rate take effect, the lease liability is reassessed and adjusted
against the right-of-use asset.
Lease payments are allocated
between principal and finance costs. The finance cost is charged to
profit or loss over the lease period to produce a constant periodic
rate of interest on the remaining balance of the liability for each
period.
Right-of-use assets are measured
at cost comprising the following:
§ the
amount of the initial measurement of lease liability
§ any
lease payments made at or before the commencement date less any
lease incentives received
§ any
initial direct costs, and restoration costs.
Right-of-use assets are generally
depreciated over the shorter of the asset's useful life and the
lease term on a straight-line basis. If the group is reasonably
certain to exercise a purchase option, the right-of-use asset is
depreciated over the underlying asset's useful life.
19 Property,
plant and equipment
|
Motor
Vehicles
£'000
|
Property, Plant &
Equipment
£'000
|
IT
Equipment
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Opening net book amount 1 July 2022
|
59
|
36
|
-
|
95
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
21
|
21
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Depreciation
|
(9)
|
(12)
|
(5)
|
(26)
|
Adjustment to currency
translation
|
(3)
|
(2)
|
(1)
|
(6)
|
Closing net book value 30 June 2023
|
47
|
22
|
15
|
84
|
Cost
|
145
|
191
|
20
|
356
|
Accumulated
depreciation
|
(98)
|
(169)
|
(5)
|
(272)
|
Net book amount 30 June 2023
|
47
|
22
|
15
|
84
|
Additions
|
57
|
-
|
12
|
69
|
Disposals
|
(2)
|
-
|
-
|
(2)
|
Depreciation
|
(11)
|
(10)
|
(8)
|
(29)
|
Adjustment to currency
translation
|
(5)
|
-
|
-
|
(5)
|
Closing net book value 30 June 2024
|
86
|
12
|
19
|
117
|
Cost
|
179
|
191
|
32
|
402
|
Accumulated
depreciation
|
(93)
|
(179)
|
(13)
|
(285)
|
Net book amount 30 June 2024
|
86
|
12
|
19
|
117
|
19 Property,
plant and equipment (continued)
Recognition and measurement
Plant and equipment is stated at
historical cost. Historical cost includes expenditure that is
directly attributable to the acquisition of the items and costs
incurred in bringing the asset into use.
Subsequent costs are included in
the asset's carrying amount or recognised as a separate asset, as
appropriate, only when it is probable that future economic benefits
associated with the item flow to the Group and the cost of the item
can be measured reliably. The carrying amount of the replaced part
is de-recognised. All other repairs and maintenance costs are
recognised in the income statement as incurred.
An item of property, plant and
equipment and any significant part initially recognised is
derecognised upon disposal or when no future economic benefits are
expected from its use or disposal. Any gain or loss arising on
derecognition of the asset (calculated as the difference between
the net disposal proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset) is
included in the income statement when the asset is
derecognised.
Depreciation methods and useful lives
Depreciation is calculated using
the straight-line method to allocate their costs over their
estimated useful lives, or in the case of leasehold improvements
and curtained leased plant and equipment, the shorter lease term as
follows:
§ Motor
vehicles:
8 - 10 years
§ Equipment:
5 - 10 years
§ IT
equipment:
3 - 5 years
§ Leasehold improvements:
2 - 10 years
20
Commitments
Capital commitments
Capital expenditure contracted for
at the end of the reporting period but not recognised as
liabilities is as follows:
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Within one year
|
2,825
|
4,589
|
-
|
-
|
Between one and five
years
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Later than five years
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Total capital commitments
|
2,825
|
4,589
|
-
|
-
|
GROUP STRUCTURE AND RELATED PARTY
INFORMATION
21 Investment
in subsidiaries
As at, and throughout the
financial year ended 30 June 2024, the ultimate parent entity of
the Group was Greatland Gold plc. Information relating to
subsidiaries is included below:
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Investment in
subsidiaries
|
90,760
|
250
|
Total
|
90,760
|
250
|
Debt to Equity Conversion
On 31 May 2024 Greatland Gold plc
executed a debt to equity conversion of its loan with 100% owned
subsidiary, Greatland Holdings Pty Ltd through a share subscription
agreement. The intercompany loan historically has been eliminated
on consolidation as it is between members of the consolidated
group. On 31 May 2024 Greatland Gold plc held a receivable from
Greatland Holdings Pty Ltd of £90.51 million which was converted to
equity through a Share subscription agreement at a price of A$1 per
share. This resulted in the issue of 174,058,276 shares from
Greatland Holdings Pty Ltd to Greatland Gold plc and the
extinguishment of the intercompany loan balance.
At 30 June 2024 the balance of the
investment in subsidiary held by Greatland Gold plc is £90.76
million (2023: £0.25 million) post the debt to equity
conversion.
|
|
Country of
|
|
% interest
|
Controlled entities
|
Notes
|
incorporation
|
Class
|
2024
|
2023
|
Greatland Pty Ltd
|
|
Australia
|
Common
|
100%
|
100%
|
Greatland Holdings Group Pty
Ltd
|
(a)
|
Australia
|
Common
|
100%
|
100%
|
Greatland Exploration Pty
Ltd
|
(a)
|
Australia
|
Common
|
100%
|
100%
|
Greatland Juri Pty Ltd
|
(a)
|
Australia
|
Common
|
100%
|
100%
|
Greatland Paterson South Pty
Ltd
|
(a)
|
Australia
|
Common
|
100%
|
100%
|
(a) The wholly owned subsidiaries
were formed and incorporated in the prior financial
year.
The registered address of the
Australian subsidiaries is Level 3, 502 Hay Street, Subiaco, WA
6008.
Recognition and measurement
Investments in subsidiary
companies are classified as non-current assets and included in the
statement of financial position of the Company at cost, less any
provision for impairment.
Investments in subsidiaries that
suffered an impairment are reviewed for possible reversal of the
impairment at the end of each reporting period.
22 Interest in
joint arrangements
Set out below are the joint
arrangements of the group:
|
|
% interest
|
|
Joint arrangement
|
Holding
entity
|
2024
|
2023
|
Nature of business
|
Havieron Joint Venture
|
Greatland Pty Ltd
|
30%
|
30%
|
Development and exploration of
precious and base metals
|
Juri Joint Venture
|
Greatland Juri Pty Ltd
|
49%
|
49%
|
Exploration of precious and base
metals
|
Paterson South Joint
Venture*
|
Greatland Paterson South Pty Ltd
|
-
|
-
|
Exploration of precious and base
metals, entered into on 30 May 2023
|
* Formation of Paterson South JV is subject to Greatland
Paterson South Pty Ltd satisfying the initial minimum expenditure
and drilling commitments required as part of the farm-in with Rio
Tinto.
Recognition and measurement
A joint operation is a joint
arrangement whereby the parties of the arrangement have rights to
the assets, and obligations for the liabilities, relating to the
arrangement.
When the Group undertakes its
activities under joint operations, the Group as a joint operator
recognises in relation to its interest in a joint
operation:
§ Its
assets, including its share of any assets held jointly
§ Its
liabilities, including its share of any liabilities incurred
jointly
§ Its
revenue from the sale of its share of the output arising from the
joint operation
§ Its
share of the revenue from the sale of the output by the joint
operation
§ Its
expenses, including its share of any expenses incurred
jointly.
In some cases, Greatland
participates in unincorporated joint venture arrangements where it
has the rights to its share of the assets and obligations and its
share of the revenue and expenses of the arrangement, but it does
not share joint control. In such cases, Greatland accounts for its
share of the assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses in
accordance with the IFRSs applicable to the particular assets,
liabilities, revenues and expenses and obligations for the
liabilities relating to the arrangement similar to a joint
operation noted above.
23 Related
party transactions
Remuneration of key management personnel
|
2024
£
|
2023
£
|
Short-term employee
benefits
|
2,217,625
|
2,004,039
|
Share-based payments
|
2,344,082
|
9,420,547
|
Long-term employee
benefits
|
16,216
|
18,799
|
Post-employment
benefits
|
98,529
|
85,555
|
Total
|
4,676,452
|
11,528,940
|
Detailed information about the
remuneration received by each key management person is provided in
the remuneration report.
Transactions with key management personnel
There were no transactions with
key management personnel during the period.
OTHER NOTES
24 Share-based
payments
The total expense arising from the
share-based payment transactions recognised during the year was as
follows:
|
Note
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Employee long term incentive
plan
|
(a)
|
3,442
|
981
|
Directors' co-investment
options
|
(b)
|
-
|
8,611
|
Other
schemes1
|
|
(162)
|
195
|
Total
|
|
3,280
|
9,787
|
1 Negative amount relates to
reversal of share-based payment expense on forfeited CFO shares due
to resignation during the period.
(a) Employee Long Term Incentive Plan
(LTIP)
Greatland's Board approved LTIP
became effective in February 2022. The LTIP is designed to provide
long-term incentives for employees (including executive directors)
to deliver long-term shareholder returns. Under the LTIP,
participants are granted performance rights or options which vest
if certain performance standards are met. Participation in the plan
is at the Board's discretion and no individual has a contractual
right to participate in the plan or to receive any guaranteed
benefits.
Set out below are performance
rights and options granted under the Company's Employee Equity
Incentive Plan over ordinary shares which are granted for nil cash
consideration. Management has assessed that non-market and market
conditions are more than probable to be achieved by the expiry date
and therefore the total value of the performance rights
incorporates all performance rights awarded. The expense recorded
as share-based payments is recognised to the service period end
date on a straight-line basis as the service conditions are
inherent in the award.
Each performance right and option
converts to one ordinary share in the Company upon satisfaction of
the performance conditions linked to the performance rights. The
performance rights do not carry any other privileges. The fair
value of the non-market condition performance rights granted is
determined based on the number of performance rights awarded
multiplied by the Company's share price on the date
awarded.
The expense for the period of £3.4
million represents the fair value of the instruments expensed over
the vesting period.
The Group granted the following on
19 September 2023:
§ FY23 Performance
Rights: 13,306,047 performance
rights on 27 July 2022 under the Greatland LTIP which were in
respect of the 2023 financial year. The amount of performance
rights will vest depending on a number of performance targets
during a three year performance period from 1 July 2023 to 30 June
2025. The share-based payment expense to be recognised in future
periods is £0.7 million.
§ Employee Retention
Rights: 31,100,000 nominally priced
share options of £0.001 on a once off basis to incentivise
retention through a pivotal period of the Group's growth. Subject
to satisfaction of service criteria, the holder must be employed by
Greatland on 28 February 2026 to exercise. The share-based payment
expense to be recognised in future periods is £1.9
million.
§ Employee Co-Investment
Options: 302,700,000 grant of
premium priced share options of £0.119 to incentivise retention
through a pivotal period in the Group's growth and align their
interests to pursue value growth for all shareholders. Subject to
satisfaction of service criteria, the holder must be employed by
Greatland on 28 February 2026 to exercise. The share-based payment
expense to be recognised in future periods is £5.3
million.
The fair value at grant date is
independently determined using an adjusted form of the
Black-Scholes Model which includes a Monte Carlo simulation model
for the TSR rights. The key assumptions were as follows:
Fair value of performance rights and
assumptions
|
2023 LTIP
|
Retention
Rights
|
Co-Investment
Options
|
Volume Granted
|
13,306,047
|
31,100,000
|
302,700,000
|
Grant date
|
19
September 2023
|
19
September 2023
|
19
September 2023
|
Fair value - market
hurdle
|
£0.03875
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Fair value - non-market
hurdle
|
£0.07008
|
£0.07024
|
£0.01964
|
Share price at grant
date
|
£0.071
|
£0.071
|
£0.071
|
Exercise price
|
£0.001
|
£0.001
|
£0.119
|
Expected volatility
|
59.17%
|
69.28%
|
62.49%
|
Vesting date
|
30 June
2025
|
28
February 2026
|
28
February 2026
|
Life of performance
rights
|
10
years
|
10
years
|
2.9
years
|
Expected dividends
|
nil
|
nil
|
nil
|
Risk free interest rate
|
4.69%
|
4.23%
|
4.49%
|
Valuation methodology
|
Monte
Carlo &
Black
Scholes
|
Black
Scholes
|
Black
Scholes
|
(b) Directors' Co-investment Options
The Company granted co-investment
options in the prior year to subscribe for new ordinary shares in
the Company to four Directors, Mark Barnaba, Elizabeth Gaines, Paul
Hallam and Jimmy Wilson. The co-investment option structure has
been designed to create strong and immediate alignment with
shareholders to deliver substantial share price growth, with the
options being set at £0.119, representing a 45% premium to the
equity placement in August 2022 of £0.082. There
are no future amounts associated with these options to be expensed
in future periods.
The Group issued 235,000,000
co-investment options on 12 September 2022. The fair value at grant
date was independently determined using a Binomial simulation
model. The key assumptions were as follows:
Fair value of performance rights and
assumptions
|
Directors'
options
|
Grant date
|
12
September 2022
|
Fair value
|
£0.0366
|
Share price at grant
date
|
£0.0902
|
Exercise price
|
£0.119
|
Expected volatility
|
60%
|
Vesting date
|
12
September 2022
|
Life of options
|
4
years
|
Expected dividends
|
0.00%
|
Risk free interest rate
|
2.92%
|
Valuation methodology
|
Binominal
|
Options
The following table illustrates
the number of, and movements in options during the
period:
|
Weighted average exercise
price
30 June
2024
|
Year ended 30 June
2024
|
Weighted average exercise
price
30 June
2023
|
Full year
ended
30 June
2023
|
Outstanding at the beginning of the year
|
£0.112
|
261,750,000
|
£0.026
|
79,000,000
|
Granted
during the period
|
£0.119
|
302,700,000
|
£0.119
|
235,000,000
|
Exercised during the period
|
£0.009
|
(21,750,000)
|
£0.012
|
(52,250,000)
|
Forfeited during the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Outstanding at the end of
the period
|
£0.116
|
542,700,000
|
£0.112
|
261,750,000
|
Vested and
exercisable
|
£0.119
|
240,000,000
|
£0.110
|
256,750,000
|
Rights
The following table illustrates
the number of, and movements in rights during the
period:
|
Weighted average exercise
price
30 June
2024
|
Year ended 30 June
2024
|
Weighted average exercise
price
30 June
2023
|
Full year
ended
30 June
2023
|
Outstanding at the beginning of the year
|
£0.001
|
23,500,000
|
£0.001
|
23,500,000
|
Granted
during the period
|
£0.001
|
44,406,047
|
-
|
-
|
Exercised during the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Forfeited during the period
|
£0.001
|
(5,219,472)
|
-
|
-
|
Outstanding at the end of
the period
|
£0.001
|
62,686,575
|
£0.001
|
23,500,000
|
Vested and
exercisable
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Recognition and measurement
The Group measures the cost of
equity-settled transactions with employees by reference to the fair
value of the equity instruments at the date at which they were
granted. Non-vesting conditions and market vesting conditions are
factored into the fair value of the options granted. If all other
vesting conditions are satisfied, a charge is made irrespective of
whether the marketing vesting conditions are satisfied. The
cumulative expense is not adjusted for failure to achieve market
vesting conditions or where a non-vesting condition is not
satisfied.
Estimating fair value for
share-based payment transactions requires determining the most
appropriate valuation model, which is dependent on the terms and
conditions of the grant. This estimate also requires determining
the most appropriate inputs to the valuation model including the
expected life of the share option, volatility and dividend yield
and making assumptions about them.
The fair value of options granted
to directors and others in respect of services provided is
recognised as an expense in the profit and loss account with a
corresponding increase in equity reserves - the share-based payment
reserve.
On exercise or cancellation of
share options, the proportion of the share-based payment reserve
relevant to those options is transferred to the profit and loss
account reserve. On exercise, equity is also increased by the
amount of the proceeds received. The fair value is measured at
grant date and the charge is spread over the relevant vesting
period.
Key estimates and
assumptions - Share-based payments
The fair value of performance rights is measured using a
Black-Scholes model which includes a Monte Carlo simulation model
for the TSR rights. The fair value includes assumptions for the
expected volatility, dividend yield and a risk-free rate as at the
measurement date which are detailed above. A 60% volatility was
applied based on the parent entity's historical volatility of the
share price and considering the volatility of several peer
companies.
|
25
Provisions
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Current provisions
|
|
|
|
|
Employee benefits
|
-
|
186
|
-
|
186
|
Total current provisions
|
-
|
186
|
-
|
186
|
Non-current provisions
|
|
|
|
|
Employee benefits
|
98
|
63
|
-
|
-
|
Lease make good
provision
|
14
|
14
|
-
|
-
|
Rehabilitation, restoration and
dismantling
|
1,898
|
1,873
|
-
|
-
|
Total non-current provision
|
2,010
|
1,950
|
-
|
-
|
Total provisions
|
2,010
|
2,136
|
-
|
186
|
Movements in each class of
provision during the financial year are set out below:
|
Rehabilitation
£'000
|
Employee benefits
£'000
|
Lease make
good
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
As at 1 July 2023
|
1,873
|
249
|
14
|
2,136
|
Additional provisions
recognised
|
-
|
37
|
-
|
37
|
Amounts used during the
year
|
-
|
(186)
|
-
|
(186)
|
Unwinding of discount
|
25
|
-
|
-
|
25
|
Adjustment to currency
translation
|
-
|
(2)
|
-
|
(2)
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
1,898
|
98
|
14
|
2,010
|
Recognition and measurement
Employee Benefits
The leave obligations cover the
Group's liabilities for long service leave which are classified as
other long-term benefits. The Group has liabilities for long
service leave that are not expected to be settled wholly within 12
months after the end of the period in which the employees render
the related service. These obligations are therefore measured as
the present value of expected future payments to be made in respect
of services provided by employees up to the end of the reporting
period, using the projected unit credit method. Consideration is
given to expected future wage and salary levels, experience of
employee departures and periods of service. Expected future
payments are discounted using market yields at the end of the
reporting period of high-quality corporate bonds with terms and
currencies that match, as closely as possible, the estimated future
cash outflows. Remeasurements because of experience adjustments and
changes in actuarial assumptions are recognised in profit or loss.
The obligations are presented as current liabilities in the balance
sheet if the entity does not have an unconditional right to defer
settlement for at least 12 months after the reporting period,
regardless of when the actual settlement is expected to
occur.
Lease make good provisions
The Group is required to restore
the leased premises to their original condition at the end of the
respective lease terms. A provision has been recognised for the
present value of the estimated expenditure required to remove any
leasehold improvements. These costs have been capitalised as part
of the cost of leasehold improvements and are amortised over the
shorter of the term of the lease and the useful life of the
assets.
Rehabilitation, restoration and
dismantling
The Group recognises a provision
for the estimate of the future costs of restoration activities on a
discounted basis at the time of disturbance. The nature of these
restoration activities includes dismantling and removing
structures, rehabilitating mines, dismantling operating facilities,
closure of plant and waste sites, and restoration, reclamation and
re-vegetation of affected areas. When the liability is initially
recognised, the present value of the estimated costs is capitalised
by increasing the carrying amount of the related assets to the
extent that it was incurred by the development/construction of the
asset.
Over time, the discounted
liability is increased for the change in the present value based on
a discount rate that reflects current market assessments.
Additional disturbances or changes in rehabilitation costs will be
recognised as additions or changes to the corresponding asset and
rehabilitation liability when incurred. The unwinding of the effect
of discounting the provision is recorded as a finance cost in the
statement of comprehensive income. The carrying amount capitalised
as a part of mining assets is depreciated/amortised over the life
of the related asset.
Rehabilitation and restoration
obligations arising from the Group's exploration activities are
recognised immediately in the income statement. If a change to the
estimated provision results in an increase in the rehabilitation
liability and therefore an addition to the carrying value of the
related asset, the Group considers whether this is an indication of
impairment of the asset. If the revised assets, net of
rehabilitation provisions, exceed the recoverable amount, that
portion of the increase to the provision is charged directly to the
statement of comprehensive income.
Key estimates and
assumptions - Rehabilitation provisions
The Group assesses its rehabilitation, restoration and
dismantling (rehabilitation) provision at each reporting date.
Significant estimates and assumptions are made in determining the
provision as there are numerous factors that will affect the
ultimate amount payable. These factors include estimates of the
extent, timing and costs of rehabilitation activities,
technological changes, regulatory changes and cost increases as
compared to the inflation rates. These uncertainties may result in
future actual expenditure differing from the amounts currently
provided. The provision at reporting date represents management's
best estimate of the present value of the future rehabilitation
costs.
The provision for rehabilitation has been recorded assuming a
risk-free nominal discount rate derived from an Australian 10 year
government bond rate of 4.3% and long-term inflation of 3.0%. The
discount rate approximates the estimated period for when the
majority of the future rehabilitation costs are expected to be
incurred.
|
26 Contingent
assets
In November 2022, Greatland
entered into an agreement with Flynn Gold to sell its Tasmanian
tenements. The consideration for the purchase consisted
of:
(a) Initial
consideration: £0.1 million (satisfied by the issue of 2,000,000
Flynn Gold shares at a deemed issue price of A$0.10 per Flynn Gold
share).
(b) Deferred
contingent consideration:
(i)
A$500,000 upon the definition of a JORC-compliant Mineral Resource
of at least 500,000 ounces of gold in aggregate within one or both
tenements (payable in cash or Flynn Gold shares, at Flynn Gold's
election);
(ii)
A$500,000 upon the issue of a permit to mine by Mineral Resources
Tasmania in respect of any part of the tenements (payable in cash
or Flynn Gold shares, at Flynn Gold's election); and
(iii) a 1% Net
Smelter Royalty payable to Greatland in respect of any production
from the tenements.
The contingent asset associated
with the deferred consideration has not been recognised as a
receivable at 30 June 2024 as receipt of the amount is dependent on
the outcome of the requirements outlined above.
27
Remuneration of auditors
|
2024
£
|
2023
£
|
Auditors of the Group - PKF and related network
firms
|
|
|
Audit and review of financial
reports
|
|
|
Group audit by PKF
Littlejohn
|
67,800
|
60,000
|
Interim review by PKF
Littlejohn
|
13,800
|
12,000
|
Controlled entities by PKF
Perth
|
24,650
|
23,850
|
Total audit and review of
financial reports
|
106,250
|
95,850
|
Regulatory assurance services by
PKF Littlejohn - Reporting Accountant
|
171,000
|
90,000
|
Total services provided by PKF
|
277,250
|
185,850
|
28 Events
after the reporting period
Telfer and Havieron Acquisition
Subsequent to year end the
Greatland announced:
§ On 10
September 2024, certain wholly owned subsidiaries of Greatland Gold
plc, including Greatland Pty Ltd, had entered into a binding
agreement with certain Newmont Corporation subsidiaries to acquire,
subject to certain conditions being satisfied, a 70% ownership
interest in the Havieron project (consolidating Greatland's
ownership of Havieron to 100%), 100% ownership of the Telfer
gold-copper mine, and other related interests in assets in the
Paterson region;
§ The
formal completion of the transaction is subject to the satisfaction of
certain conditions precedent and is targeted to occur during Q4
2024;
§ Total
consideration face value for the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition is
US$475 million (£373.1 million) made up of US$155.1 million (£121.7
million) cash payment, US$52.4 million (£41.5 million) repayment of
the outstanding Havieron Joint Venture loan, US$167.5 million
(£131.4 million) in new Greatland Gold plc shares to be issued to
Newmont and US$100 million (£78.5 million) in deferred cash
consideration. The total estimated fair value consideration is
US$420.8 million (£330.5 million);
§ The
cash consideration will be funded through a fully underwritten
institutional placing and retail offer approved by the shareholders
on 30 September 2024; and
§ At the
date of this report the initial business combination accounting is
incomplete as formal completion of the transaction is still subject
to certain condition precedents, including regulatory
approvals. The business combination
accounting will be completed within 12 months from formal
completion of the transaction as per IFRS 3 Business Combinations.
Greatland Placing
The Company announced the
Havieron-Telfer Acquisition along with an associated fully
underwritten institutional placing to raise US$325 million (£248.6
million) and retail offer to raise US$8.8 million (£6.7 million).
On 30 September 2024, a general meeting of shareholders approved
the Havieron-Telfer Acquisition and the issue of shares. The
proceeds of the placing will be used to finance the Havieron-Telfer
Acquisition, repayment of the £41.5 million (US$52.4 million)
outstanding Havieron JV loan to Newmont, transaction costs and
expenses in connection with the Acquisition and Placing and working
capital requirements.
Related party transactions
The following directors and
officers of the Company participated in the share placing in
September 2024 at an issue price of £0.048 per share, as
follows:
|
Number of Shares
Subscribed
|
£
|
Directors / Officers
|
|
|
Mark Barnaba
|
1,589,303
|
76,287
|
Elizabeth Gaines
|
1,059,535
|
50,858
|
Shaun Day
|
1,589,303
|
76,287
|
James (Jimmy) Wilson
|
794,651
|
38,143
|
Yasmin Broughton
|
529,767
|
25,429
|
Paul Hallam
|
794,651
|
38,143
|
Dean Horton
|
211,773
|
10,165
|
Damien Stephens
|
317,661
|
15,248
|
Total
|
6,886,644
|
330,560
|
Grant of employee incentive options
On 16 October 2024, Greatland
granted 25,000,000 Retention Rights at £0.119, 17,496,137 FY24
Performance Rights and 39,855,249 FY25 Performance Rights at an
exercise price of £0.001 to employees under the Company's employee
share plan. Collectively the options and rights are an important
element in the attraction and retention of individuals pivotal to
Greatland's growth and their alignment with shareholder outcomes.
Further details are included in the Remuneration Report.
Standby loan facility
Subsequent to year end, in July
the Company executed a drawdown of A$7 million (£3.6 million) of
the unsecured A$50 million (£26.0 million ) standby facility with
Wyloo. The loan was then subsequently repaid in full from the
equity proceeds and the facility terminated.